Social, Statistical, and Environmental Sciences Business Unit, RTI International, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Physiological Nursing, School of Nursing, University of California - San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.
Ear Hear. 2024;45(Suppl 1):42S-52S. doi: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000001541. Epub 2024 Sep 19.
Qualitative evidence suggests that stigma experienced by people who are d/Deaf and hard of hearing (d/DHH) can reduce willingness to engage with health services. Quantitative evidence remains lacking, however, about how health care providers (HCPs) perceive societal stigma toward people who are d/DHH, how HCPs might enact d/DHH stigma within provider-patient encounters, and what patients who are d/DHH share with providers about those patients' perceptions and experiences of stigma. Such quantitative evidence would allow HCPs to understand if and how stigma influences hearing health decisions made by people who are d/DHH. It could also shape practices to reduce d/DHH stigma within clinical encounters and guide providers in considering stigma as a driving force in their patients' hearing health care decisions. Building that evidence base requires validated quantitative measures. In response, the present study initiated an iterative process toward developing and preliminarily validating HCP self-report measures for different forms of d/DHH stigma. These measures draw upon HCPs' own perspectives, as well as their reports of secondhand information about stigma shared during clinical conversations. We developed and preliminary validated four measures: (1) provider-perceived stigma (HCPs' perceptions of the existence of negative attitudes and stereotypes toward d/DHH individuals in society), (2) provider-enacted stigma (self-reported subtle or indirect acts of stigma HCPs might commit during clinical encounters), (3) secondhand patient-experienced stigma (external acts of stigma reported to HCPs by patients who are d/DHH during clinical encounters), and (4) secondhand patient-perceived stigma (perceptions of negative attitudes and stereotypes reported to HCPs by patients who are d/DHH during clinical encounters).
Scale items were extracted from a comprehensive literature review of stigma measures. Question stems and individual items were adapted for HCPs, cognitively tested on 5 HCPs, and pretested with 30 HCPs. The 4 scales were then validated on a sample of primary care providers and hearing care specialists (N = 204) recruited through an online survey. All data were collected in the United States.
We conducted an exploratory factor analysis of the four proposed d/DHH stigma HCP stigma scales. Scale items loaded satisfactorily with ordinal alphas ranging between 0.854 and 0.944.
The four measures developed and preliminarily validated in this study can provide opportunities for HCPs to develop a more nuanced understanding of stigma experienced and perceived by their patients who are d/DHH and how that stigma manifests across social contexts, including health care settings. Further, the ability to assess forms of d/DHH stigma in clinical encounters, as well as their association with patient disengagement and resistance to advanced hearing care, could lead to innovative stigma-reduction interventions. Such interventions could then be evaluated using the measures from this article and then applied to clinical practice. We envision these measures being further refined, adapted, and tested for a variety of health care contexts, including primary care settings where hearing difficulties may first be identified and in hearing health care settings where audiologic rehabilitation is initiated.
定性研究表明,聋人和重听人士(d/DHH)所经历的污名化会降低他们对健康服务的参与意愿。然而,目前仍然缺乏关于医疗保健提供者(HCP)如何感知社会对 d/DHH 人群的污名化、HCP 如何在医患接触中实施 d/DHH 污名化,以及 d/DHH 患者与提供者分享哪些关于他们对污名化的看法和经历的定量证据。这种定量证据将使 HCP 能够了解污名化是否以及如何影响 d/DHH 人群的听力健康决策。它还可以调整临床接触中的减少 d/DHH 污名化的实践,并指导提供者将污名化视为其患者听力保健决策的驱动因素。建立这一证据基础需要经过验证的定量措施。为此,本研究开始了一个迭代过程,旨在为不同形式的 d/DHH 污名化开发和初步验证 HCP 自我报告的测量工具。这些措施借鉴了 HCP 自身的观点,以及他们在临床对话中报告的关于污名化的二手信息。我们开发并初步验证了四种测量工具:(1)提供者感知的污名化(HCPs 对社会中存在针对 d/DHH 个体的消极态度和刻板印象的感知);(2)提供者实施的污名化(HCPs 在临床接触中可能犯下的微妙或间接的污名化行为);(3)二手患者经历的污名化(患者在临床接触中向 HCPs 报告的外部污名化行为);(4)二手患者感知的污名化(患者在临床接触中向 HCPs 报告的消极态度和刻板印象)。
量表项目从对污名化措施的全面文献综述中提取。问题主题和个别项目经过了 5 名 HCP 的认知测试,并在 30 名 HCP 中进行了预测试。然后,这四个量表在通过在线调查招募的初级保健提供者和听力保健专家样本(N=204)中进行了验证。所有数据均在美国收集。
我们对四个拟议的 d/DHH 污名化 HCP 污名化量表进行了探索性因素分析。量表项目的负荷令人满意,有序阿尔法介于 0.854 和 0.944 之间。
本研究中开发和初步验证的四个测量工具可以为 HCP 提供机会,更细致地了解他们的 d/DHH 患者所经历和感知的污名化,以及这种污名化如何在社会背景下表现出来,包括医疗保健环境。此外,能够在临床接触中评估 d/DHH 污名化的形式,以及它们与患者脱离和抵制高级听力保健的关联,可能会导致创新的污名化减少干预措施。然后,可以使用本文中的测量工具来评估这些干预措施,然后将其应用于临床实践。我们设想这些措施将进一步完善、调整和测试,以适应各种医疗保健环境,包括可能首先发现听力问题的初级保健环境,以及开始听觉康复的听力保健环境。