Determinants and progression of stigma in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/motor neuron disease.

Carolyn A Young, Amina Chaouch, Christopher J Mcdermott, Ammar Al-Chalabi, Suresh K Chhetri, Caroline Bidder, Elizabeth Edmonds, Cathy Ellis, Joe Annadale, Lisa Wilde, Basil Sharrack, Andrea Malaspina, Oliver Leach, Roger Mills, Alan Tennant
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Abstract

Objective: Stigma in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/motor neurone disease (ALS/MND) may be felt or enacted; felt stigma covers feeling devalued by the illness, whereas enacted stigma refers to being treated differently because of it. Stigma in ALS/MND has been shown to increase social withdrawal, worsen quality of life, and reduce use of assistive devices, so we explored prevalence and factors influencing stigma. Methods: Participants in the Trajectories of Outcome in Neurological Conditions-ALS study completed scales measuring stigma, fatigue, spasticity, functioning, mood, worry, self-esteem, and perceived health, as well as demographic information and symptoms like head drop or emotional lability. Following transformation to interval-scale estimates, data were analyzed by regression, structural equation modeling, and trajectory models. Results: Stigma was experienced by 83.5% of 1059 respondents. Worry, disease severity (King's stage ≥ 3), emotional lability, fatigue, spasticity, and bulbar onset increase stigma. In contrast, increasing age, living with spouse/partner, and greater self-esteem were associated with reduced stigma. Trajectory analysis over 30 months (N = 1049) showed three groups, the largest (70.2%) had high levels of stigma which significantly increased during follow-up. In a recently diagnosed subset of 347 participants, stigma was experienced early in the disease course (<7 months after diagnosis), and for 77.2% stigma significantly increased over time. Conclusions: Both felt and enacted stigma are frequently perceived by people living with ALS/MND. Younger people and those with bulbar onset, emotional lability, worry, fatigue, and spasticity, or at more advanced clinical stages, are at greater risk.

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肌萎缩性侧索硬化症/运动神经元疾病中柱头的决定因素和进展。
目的:肌萎缩性侧索硬化症/运动神经元疾病(ALS/MND)的柱头可能是感觉或制定的;​ALS/MND患者的耻辱感会增加社会退缩,恶化生活质量,减少辅助器具的使用,因此我们探讨了耻辱感的患病率及其影响因素。方法:神经系统疾病结局轨迹- als研究的参与者完成了耻辱感、疲劳、痉挛、功能、情绪、担忧、自尊和感知健康的量表,以及人口统计信息和症状,如头下垂或情绪不稳定。在转换为区间尺度估计后,通过回归、结构方程建模和轨迹模型对数据进行分析。结果:1059名被调查者中,有83.5%的人有耻辱感。担忧、疾病严重程度(King's分期≥3)、情绪不稳定、疲劳、痉挛和球型发病都会增加耻辱感。相反,随着年龄的增长,与配偶/伴侣生活在一起,以及更强的自尊与减少耻辱感有关。30个月的轨迹分析(N = 1049)显示,有3组患者的病耻感水平较高(70.2%),随访期间病耻感水平显著升高。在最近诊断的347名参与者中,病耻感在病程的早期经历过(结论:ALS/MND患者经常感受到和制定的病耻感。年轻人和那些有球头发病、情绪不稳定、焦虑、疲劳和痉挛,或临床阶段较晚期的人,风险更大。
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