Department of Neurology, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013;8(1):e54074. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0054074. Epub 2013 Jan 16.
People who have a disease often experience stigma, a socially and culturally embedded process through which individuals experience stereotyping, devaluation, and discrimination. Stigma has great impact on quality of life, behavior, and life chances. We do not know whether or not migraine is stigmatizing.
We studied 123 episodic migraine patients, 123 chronic migraine patients, and 62 epilepsy patients in a clinical setting to investigate the extent to which stigma attaches to migraine, using epilepsy as a comparison. We used the stigma scale for chronic illness, a 24-item questionnaire suitable for studying chronic neurologic diseases, and various disease impact measures.
Patients with chronic migraine had higher scores (54.0±20.2) on the stigma scale for chronic illness than either episodic migraine (41.7±14.8) or epilepsy patients (44.6±16.3) (p<0.001). Subjects with migraine reported greater inability to work than epilepsy subjects. Stigma correlated most strongly with the mental component score of the short form of the medical outcomes health survey (SF-12), then with ability to work and migraine disability score for chronic and episodic migraine and the Liverpool impact on epilepsy scale for epilepsy. Analysis of covariance showed adjusted scores for the stigma scale for chronic illness were similar for chronic migraine (49.3; 95% confidence interval, 46.2 to 52.4) and epilepsy (46.5; 95% confidence interval, 41.6 to 51.6), and lower for episodic migraine (43.7; 95% confidence interval, 40.9 to 46.6). Ability to work was the strongest predictor of stigma as measured by the stigma scale for chronic illness.
In our model, adjusted stigma was similar for chronic migraine and epilepsy, which were greater than for episodic migraine. Stigma correlated most strongly with inability to work, and was greater for chronic migraine than epilepsy or episodic migraine because chronic migraine patients had less ability to work.
患有疾病的人常常会经历污名化,这是一种社会和文化上的固有过程,通过这个过程,个体经历刻板印象、贬低和歧视。污名化对生活质量、行为和生活机会有很大影响。我们不知道偏头痛是否具有污名化。
我们在临床环境中研究了 123 例发作性偏头痛患者、123 例慢性偏头痛患者和 62 例癫痫患者,使用癫痫作为比较,以调查偏头痛的污名化程度。我们使用慢性疾病污名量表,这是一种适合研究慢性神经疾病的 24 项问卷,以及各种疾病影响测量方法。
慢性偏头痛患者的慢性疾病污名量表得分(54.0±20.2)高于发作性偏头痛(41.7±14.8)或癫痫患者(44.6±16.3)(p<0.001)。偏头痛患者报告的工作能力下降程度大于癫痫患者。污名化与短期医疗结果健康调查(SF-12)的精神成分评分相关性最强,其次是工作能力和偏头痛残疾评分(用于慢性和发作性偏头痛)以及癫痫对癫痫的影响量表。协方差分析显示,慢性偏头痛(49.3;95%置信区间,46.2 至 52.4)和癫痫(46.5;95%置信区间,41.6 至 51.6)的慢性疾病污名量表调整后的评分相似,而发作性偏头痛的评分较低(43.7;95%置信区间,40.9 至 46.6)。工作能力是慢性疾病污名量表测量的污名化的最强预测因子。
在我们的模型中,慢性偏头痛和癫痫的调整后污名化相似,均高于发作性偏头痛。污名化与工作能力下降相关性最强,且慢性偏头痛的污名化程度大于癫痫或发作性偏头痛,因为慢性偏头痛患者的工作能力下降程度更大。