"Patients with psoriasis often express frustration to me that they
experience discrimination in public places and the work
environment," study coauthor Dr. Joel Gelfand of the University of
Pennsylvania in Philadelphia told Reuters Health by email. "My
patients tell me that they have been asked not to use a pool, feel
embarrassed going to the hair salon or have been fired from jobs
that require interaction with the public."
Psoriasis is an autoimmune disease that speeds up the lifecycle of
skin cells, causing them to build up rapidly on the surface of the
skin. The extra skin cells cause scales and red patches that are
itchy and sometimes painful. Some people with psoriasis develop
arthritis, too.
According to the National Psoriasis Foundation, up to 7.5 million
Americans, or roughly 2 percent of the population, have psoriasis.
Gelfand and colleagues surveyed two groups of people without
psoriasis: 187 medical students at the University of Pennsylvania,
and 198 adults from Amazon.com's Mechanical Turk data collection
service.
The survey displayed images of people with psoriasis, including
enlarged images of psoriatic skin. Participants were asked to rate
the extent to which they felt compassion, pity, disgust, blame,
contempt and curiosity in response to the images. They were also
asked to choose adjectives that describe someone with psoriasis,
such as "clean" or "dirty," and rate their beliefs about common
myths and misconceptions around psoriasis.
Overall, about 54 percent of people said they wouldn't want to date
someone with psoriasis, 40 percent said they wouldn't want to shake
hands, and 32 percent said they wouldn't want to have psoriasis
patients in their homes. The most frequently endorsed stereotypes
were that people with psoriasis are insecure, sick and unattractive.
A third of participants also endorsed myths that psoriasis only
affects the skin and is not a serious disease.
"Despite so much progress in our understanding of the immunology,
genetics, comorbidities and treatment of psoriasis, harmful myths
and stereotypes about this common disease are pervasive," Gelfand
said.
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People who knew someone with psoriasis were less likely to report
myths and stereotypes, however. Even those who had previously heard
of psoriasis were more likely to report more compassion, less blame,
and less contempt.
"This suggests that learning more information about the disease and
having positive interactions with people who have psoriasis may help
to dispel myths and stereotypes," said coauthor Rebecca Pearl of the
University of Pennsylvania.
Pearl, Gelfand and their coauthors plan to keep studying public
attitudes, including patients' reports of stigma experiences, so
they can better understand the social and psychological burden of
the disease. Future studies should test whether educational
campaigns could reduce the myths and stereotypes around psoriasis,
they wrote in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.
"It is important to remember that outward appearance does not give
us information about internal characteristics or personality
traits," Pearl told Reuters Health by email. "Everyone can pause and
reexamine or challenge their beliefs and assumptions as a first step
toward reducing stigma."
Part of this includes educating doctors and medical students, too.
Although the students agreed with fewer myths and stereotypes, some
of them still held stigmatizing views. Even if they don't act on or
express these thoughts, it could inhibit diagnosis, treatment, and
understanding the psychosocial issues that patients face.
"Patients feel embarrassment and shame attached to their condition,
but it's not often recognized by doctors," said Katie Wang of the
Yale School of Public Health in New Haven, Connecticut. Wang, who
wasn't involved with this study, has researched the burden of stigma
on health and well-being.
"We all need to learn more about medical conditions instead of make
assumptions based on our previous knowledge," she told Reuters
Health by phone.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2CXVpvb Journal of the American Academy of
Dermatology, online August 29, 2018.
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