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Stigma in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and its association with functioning, 2018, Baken et al

Discussion in 'Psychosomatic research - ME/CFS and Long Covid' started by Andy, Jan 5, 2018.

  1. Andy

    Andy Committee Member

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    Paywalled at http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/21641846.2018.1419553?journalCode=rftg20
     
    fossil, MEMarge, ladycatlover and 7 others like this.
  2. Jonathan Edwards

    Jonathan Edwards Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    This seems to be a misuse of the word stigma:

    Dictionary: 'If something has a stigma attached to it, people think it is something to be ashamed of.'

    That is to say a stigma is a perception by onlookers of a class of condition or circumstance. Patients do not have stigmas or degrees of stigma. They may have different perceptions of how much stigma others attach to their class of condition. But one would obviously expect people with more severe functional loss to perceive stigmatisation in others more simply because there are more likely to notice they are ill.

    I have a tendency to think that the word stigma is completely unhelpful when trying to understand illness.
     
    Lidia, Webdog, MEMarge and 10 others like this.
  3. Invisible Woman

    Invisible Woman Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I only read the extract above but:

    Stop right there - most of the "stigma" and discrimination I have experienced is due to the fact that people don't believe I have a neurological or any other kind of "condition". At best I'm perceived as a deluded, delicate flower who is afraid of life, doing a bit of exercise and going to work, at worst: a benefit scrounging shirker and malingerer.
     
  4. Trish

    Trish Moderator Staff Member

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    Cambridge dictionary online told me this:

    So perhaps what people with ME are reporting is behaviour by others that conveys to us that our illness carries a stigma in society, and some people therefore treat us with disdain, disrespect, disbelief, judging us as malingerers etc. which they would not do to a person who has, for example, MS or Parkinsons disease.

    The experience is real, even if the word is not the right one.
     
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  5. Jonathan Edwards

    Jonathan Edwards Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Yes, that was my thought. But how do we know whether they are reporting a real property of other people (being sniffy) or there sensitivity to sniffiness? And surely we would expect both to correlate with functional disability. To the extent that a p value is a bit silly. You do not sort your potatoes into two piles, one of small ones and one of big ones and then ask other people to judge them as either 'mostly small' or 'mostly big' and assign a p value of 0.001 if they agree with you more often than not, showing that they were not just answering at random.

    I agree the experience is real but it is completely opaque to me what they think they are 'measuring'.
     
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  6. TiredSam

    TiredSam Committee Member

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    This looks rather ridiculous to me. The authors have failed to consider other factors which result in stigma towards M.E. sufferers, ie the attitudes and activities of the BPS brigade, the media, insurance companies, benefits assessors, doctors etc etc.

    The only factor they have chosen to look at is the one that is a characteristic of the sufferer, ie "functionality", and they've even got that backwards, because sometimes the more functional we are and the more well we appear, the more stigma we face in situations where we need our disability to be taken seriously.

    You can't study stigma towards M.E. sufferers without acknowledging the damage done by the immoral career-bent BPS sect and their manipulations of the media, insurance industry, health and benefits systems.
     
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  7. Woolie

    Woolie Senior Member

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  8. Woolie

    Woolie Senior Member

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    Here's how they define stigma:
    Its slightly better than what you thought, @Jonathan Edwards. But not much. What has power got to do with stigma? Isn't it about the attitudes of society in general? And what's this about people with power "using" stigma "to bring about labelling, stereotyping, separation, status loss, and discrimination". Makes it sound like some sort of conspiracy.

    Here's how they measured it:
    The results were that:
    1. PwMEs scored higher on this stigma scale than the control groups (epilepsy, Parkinsons', MS)
    2. PwMEs also scored lower on assessments of Applied Cognition and also on self-reported ability to participate in social roles/activities Satisfaction and level of satisfaction therein.
     
    Last edited: Jan 6, 2018
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  9. Trish

    Trish Moderator Staff Member

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    One could suggest that this is exactly what happened with ME. The psychiatrists involved in advising health insurance companies and the DWP that ME is a psychosomatic condition and coming close to saying it's the patient's fault and we don't deserve benefits etc. - seems like a conspiracy to me.

    And Wessely's 30 years of getting himself into powerful positions where he influences medical and political attitudes is also about power and influence.

    But perhaps that's what you meant, @Woolie, perhaps you were being sarcastic. I'm not awake enough to read between the lines.

    I think it was epilepsy, not alzheimer's.

    I think the fact that they used an 'opportunity sample' drawn from a patient support group, ie a self selected group, and the functional level of the ME patients was lower than that of the comparison illnesses means that any interpretation of the data is so confounded by unknowns that it's pretty impossible to interpret any form of causation.

    However, it is, I think, interesting, though unsurprising, that this particular group of people with ME perceived more stigma from those around them than the comparison groups with other neurological conditions.
     
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  10. Woolie

    Woolie Senior Member

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    No, I was serious. There's something not right with that definition. Stigma is to do with society's perception of an illness. Its not about power or control. Information can be controlled by the powerful and that information can influence society's perception of an illness. But that's just one of many factors that can contribute to stigma (others are fear of personal harm, revulsion, contempt for the groups most often affected). You've got to be clear about what stigma means and separate it from all this other stuff.

    Other than that, the paper is reasonable. But damn, if your whole paper is on stigma, you need a decent definition.
     
  11. Woolie

    Woolie Senior Member

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    Oh, woops, I corrected that above.
     
  12. Dolphin

    Dolphin Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    The Stigma Short-form scale
    I often find it useful in such papers to look at the wording of the questionnaires themselves. How they are described in the text may not as good as it could be.

    http://www.unife.it/medicina/logope...015-2016/fattori-ambientali-e-qualita-di-vita
     
    Last edited: Feb 22, 2018
  13. Dolphin

    Dolphin Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Shows the economic impact of the illness:
     
  14. ScottTriGuy

    ScottTriGuy Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Replace 'people' with 'physicians' and we'd have the Stigma by Physician scale.
     

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