| Literature DB >> 31893346 |
Marco Vincenzo Lenti1, Sara Cococcia1, Jihane Ghorayeb2, Antonio Di Sabatino1, Christian P Selinger3.
Abstract
Inflammatory bowel disease, which includes Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, is an immune-mediated, chronic relapsing disorder characterised by severe gastrointestinal symptoms that dramatically impair patients' quality of life, affecting psychological, physical, sexual, and social functions. As a consequence, patients suffering from this condition may perceive social stigmatisation, which is the identification of negative attributes that distinguish a person as different and worthy of separation from the group. Stigmatisation has been widely studied in different chronic conditions, especially in mental illnesses and HIV-infected patients. There is a growing interest also for patients with inflammatory bowel disease, in which the possibility of disease flare and surgery-related issues seem to be the most important factors determining stigmatisation. Conversely, resilience represents the quality that allows one to adopt a positive attitude and good adjustments despite adverse life events. Likewise, resilience has been studied in different populations, age groups, and chronic conditions, especially mental illnesses and cancer, but little is known about this issue in patients with inflammatory bowel disease, even if this could be an interesting area of research. Resilience can be strengthened through dedicated interventions that could potentially improve the ability to cope with the disease. In this paper, we focus on the current knowledge of stigmatisation and resilience in patients with inflammatory bowel disease.Entities:
Keywords: Crohn’s disease; Quality of life; Ulcerative colitis
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31893346 PMCID: PMC7054377 DOI: 10.1007/s11739-019-02268-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intern Emerg Med ISSN: 1828-0447 Impact factor: 3.397
Fig. 1Flow diagram of paper selection that was performed through Pubmed for articles written in English. The main research question regarded the evaluation of stigmatisation and resilience in patients suffering from inflammatory bowel disease. The medical subject heading terms “Crohn’s disease” and “ulcerative colitis” were also used. More general articles dealing with how to define and how to measure stigmatisation and resilience were used to provide background for the purpose of the review
Relevant studies exploring stigmatisation in patients with inflammatory bowel disease
| Authors | Year | Country | Type of stigma | Sample size | Key points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wyke et al. | 1988 | UK | Perceived, enacted | 170 | Most individuals disclosed IBD, most co-workers/employers were understanding, IBD led to changes in work |
| Drossman et al. | 1989 | USA | Perceived | 150 | Most common concerns related to surgery, energy level and body image |
| Salter | 1990 | USA | Internalised | Not clear | Ostomy allows “to control” the disease, feeling clumsy during sexual intercourse |
| Mayberry et al. | 1992 | UK | Enacted | 58 (CD only) | Unemployment, CD patients more likely to conceal their disease to employers |
| Moody et al. | 1992 | UK | Enacted | 53 | Employers unwilling to employ an individual with IBD and to give time off to attend clinics |
| Mayberry | 1999 | UK | Enacted | 195 (personnel managers) | Unwillingness to provide time to see the physician, IBD jeopardises promotions |
| Moody et al. | 1999 | UK | Perceived | 64 | Many students complain of teachers not being sympathetic, underachievement due to ill health |
| Moskovitz et al. | 2000 | Canada | Perceived | 86 | Poor social support is related to worse surgical outcomes |
| de Rooy et al. | 2001 | Canada | Perceived | 241 | Greater stigma perceived by elderly, females, patients with UC, and with low level of education; |
| Levenstein et al. | 2001 | Cross-national | Perceived, internalised | 2002 | Complications and variable disease evolution elicit concern; specific issues vary among countries |
| Daniel | 2002 | USA | Perceived, enacted, internalised | 5 | Impaired body image, feeling different, ashamed and worried about others thinking IBD is used for secondary gain |
| Krause | 2003 | Chile | Internalised | 19 | IBD as illness that invades all dimensions of life |
| Looper and Kirmayer | 2004 | Canada | Perceived | 89 (51 IBD) | Higher level of perceived stigma in functional disorders vs other medical conditions (including IBD) |
| Finlay et al. | 2006 | USA | Perceived | 148 | Major differences across ethnic groups regarding knowledge of disease and social support |
| Smith et al. | 2007 | USA | Internalised | 195 (71 with IBD) | Disgust related to low colostomy adjustment, low life satisfaction, low quality of life and to stronger feelings of stigmatisation |
| Simmons et al. | 2007 | UK | Internalised | 51 | Stoma acceptance, interpersonal relationship and location of the stoma were associated with adjustment |
| Taft et al. | 2009 | USA | Perceived | 211 | Perceived stigma affects quality of life |
| Voth and Sirois | 2009 | UK | Internalised | 259 | IBD self-blame is related to poorer outcomes |
| Taft et al. | 2011 | USA | Perceived | 496 | Greater stigma in IBS than IBD, patient outcomes more affected in stigmatised IBD patients |
| Dibley and Norton | 2013 | UK | Perceived | 611 | Emotional and psychological impact, feelings of stigma, limited lives, practical coping mechanisms |
| Czuber-Dochan et al. | 2013 | UK | Perceived | 46 | IBD-related fatigue not addressed in medical consultations |
| Taft et al. | 2013 | USA | Internalised | 191 | Social isolation common due to stigma |
| Czuber-Dochan et al. | 2014 | UK | Enacted | 20 (healthcare professionals) | IBD-related fatigue poorly understood |
| Frohlich | 2014 | USA | Perceived | 14 | Feeling stigmatised by partner, healthcare professionals, and colleagues |
| Saunders | 2014 | UK | Perceived | 16 | Non-disclosure because of shame may lead to experiencing blame |
| Bernhofer et al. | 2017 | USA | Perceived | 16 | Feeling labelled as unable to tolerate pain |
| Rohde et al. | 2018 | USA | Enacted | 127 | Enacted stigma among college students decreases when IBD is disclosed |
| Gamwell et al. | 2018 | USA | Perceived | 80 | Indirect effect of perceived stigma on depressive symptoms as it impacts on social belongingness |
| Dibley et al. | 2019 | UK | Perceived, internalised | 18 | Kinship stigma is present in IBD patients |
CD Crohn’s disease, IBD inflammatory bowel disease, IBS irritable bowel syndrome
Relevant studies exploring resilience in patients with inflammatory bowel disease
| Authors | Year | Country | Measured resilience | Sample size | Key points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sirois | 2014 | Canada | Trait resilience | 155 (IBD) | High perception of health and high levels of resilience had greater odds of using CAM |
| Dur et al. | 2014 | Austria | Psychological resilience | 15 adults (CD) | Resilience appeared to be more salient and relevant to women vs men |
| Kilpatrick et al.a | 2015 | USA | Psychological resilience | 27 (IBD) | Female IBD with high resilience showed changes in brain-behavioural pattern |
| Scardillo et al. | 2016 | USA | Resilience as traits | 45 adults (30 IBD) | Resilience was significantly higher amongst individuals who adapted well to their ostomy |
| Sehgal et al.a | 2017 | USA | Psychological resilience | 113 | Lower level of resilience was associated with anxiety and depression; higher resilience predicted higher QOL |
| Carlsen et al. | 2017 | USA | Trait resilience—predictor of adjustment | 87 (30% adolescents, 62 CD) | Self-efficacy and resilience were significant predictors of transition readiness among adolescent and young adults with IBD |
| Melinder et al. | 2017 | Sweden | Psychosocial stress resilience | 1799 (UC) | Low-to-moderate stress resilience in adolescence correlated with increased risk of CD and UC |
| Sirois and Hirsch | 2017 | Canada | Trait resilience | 152 adults (51.7% CD) | No significant difference between resilient and thriving IBD patients on perceived social support, depressive symptoms, coping efficacy, and illness acceptance |
| Skrautvol and Naden | 2017 | Norway | Stress resilience | 13 adults (7 CD) | Several themes were delineated, notably “creating resilience through integrative care” |
| Taylor et al. | 2018 | USA | Trait resilience | 328 adults (145 UC) | Resilience positively and significantly associated with HRQOL |
| Acciari et al. | 2019 | Brazil | 11 personal traits | 104 adults (CD) | Individuals who were employed without children and males were more resilient than their counterparts; CD onset > 30 years old and individuals who had complimentary activities were more resilient |
| Hwang and Yu | 2019 | Korea | A set of quality influenced by society, relationships and psychology | 90 adults (76 CD) | Negative relation between resilience and depression; resilience was not affected by clinical characteristics in UC patients; lower income, sleep disturbances, being unmarried negatively impacted resilience in CD patients |
| Luo et al. | 2019 | China | Dynamic process of resilience | 15 adults (10 CD) | Necessary cognitive traits and resilience-specific coping mechanisms to deal constructively with IBD |
CAM complementary and alternative medicine, CD Crohn’s disease, IBS irritable bowel disease, HCs healthy controls, HRQOL health-related quality of life, UC ulcerative colitis, IBD inflammatory bowel disease
aAbstracts/conference proceedings
Fig. 2Summary of the most relevant features of stigmatisation and resilience and their influencing factors. Low resilience may favour stigmatisation, whilst resistance to stigma may strengthen resilience. Inflammatory bowel disease is burdened by a number of disease-specific issues that favour social stigmatisation and may affect resilience