Understanding the Intersectional Relationship of Pain Stigma, Weight Bias Internalization, and Clinical Indicators in a Rural Population with Back Pain: A Survey-Based Study

Stigma is understood to be intersectional, meaning multiple characteristics can be stigmatizing, and they may be both overlapping and coconstitutive. Chronic pain and overweight are common complaints in the spinal surgery clinic. Since being overweight may relate to back pain in a complex fashion, w...

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Veröffentlicht in:World neurosurgery 2023-03, Vol.171, p.e846-e851
Hauptverfasser: Sedney, Cara, Cowher, Abigail, Turiano, Nicholas A., Cox, Stephanie, Dekeseredy, Patricia, Haggerty, Treah
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container_start_page e846
container_title World neurosurgery
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creator Sedney, Cara
Cowher, Abigail
Turiano, Nicholas A.
Cox, Stephanie
Dekeseredy, Patricia
Haggerty, Treah
description Stigma is understood to be intersectional, meaning multiple characteristics can be stigmatizing, and they may be both overlapping and coconstitutive. Chronic pain and overweight are common complaints in the spinal surgery clinic. Since being overweight may relate to back pain in a complex fashion, we sought to understand if there is a moderating effect between weight bias and pain stigma. This study involves a survey-based, quantitative, cross-sectional, observational design using previously validated measures and demographic and clinical information. There were 192 participants. Statistical calculations were done with statistical package for the social sciences. Pain stigma was not significantly correlated with BMI (body mass index), and weight bias was not significantly correlated with back pain. There was a strong positive correlation between weight bias and pain stigma. There was a strong positive correlation between weight bias and BMI when pain stigma was also high. Given the relationship between weight stigma and pain, the intersection of weight and pain stigma is important because it indicates the vulnerability of patients with higher BMI to other forms of stigma, such as stigma for their pain complaints. Clinicians should be mindful of expressing pain stigma more significantly amongst patients with higher BMI.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.wneu.2022.12.125
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source MEDLINE; Access via ScienceDirect (Elsevier)
subjects Back Pain
Body Mass Index
Cross-Sectional Studies
Humans
Neurosurgery
Obesity
Overweight
Pain
Rural Population
Stigma
Weight Prejudice
title Understanding the Intersectional Relationship of Pain Stigma, Weight Bias Internalization, and Clinical Indicators in a Rural Population with Back Pain: A Survey-Based Study
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