Background Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic and debilitating illness associated with psychosocial comorbidities. Adolescents are vulnerable to the additive stress of managing IBD and navigating developmental milestones. Psychosocial factors, such as catastrophizing, illness stigma, illness uncertainty, and illness-related shame, often contribute to perceived stress in chronic illnesses. However, the combination of these variables on perceived stress in adolescents with IBD has not been examined. Methods Participants completed a cross-sectional online self-report survey. Model 4 of PROCESS Macro in SPSS was used to test the parallel mediation model of the relationship between disease severity and perceived stress using catastrophizing, stigma, uncertainty, and shame as mediators using 10,000 bootstrap samples. T-tests were run to assess systematic differences in the dependent variable between subjects. Results One hundred and thirty-one adolescents (Mage = 18.95 years; 100 females) completed the survey. Females had higher stress scores than males (P =0.002), and there were no difference in stress between younger and older participants (P = 0.085), location (P = 0.484), or IBD type (P = 0.515). The total effect of disease stress on perceived stress operating through the mediators was significant, b = 0.168, SE = 0.028, 95% CI [0.112, 0.224]. Helplessness catastrophizing, illness uncertainty, and illness-related shame, but not illness stigma, were equally strong, positive mediators. Conclusions The present results suggest that helplessness catastrophizing, illness uncertainty, and illness-related shame are central elements to target in stress interventions for adolescents with IBD.
Introduction: The impact of interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome (IC/BPS) is prevalent and severe. Studies examining the IC/BPS prevalence and predictors of suicide risk are limited by their lack of theoretically relevant suicide research variables. This research reports suicide risk prevalence its biopsychosocial predictors for a community IC/BPS sample. Methods: Self-identified female patients suffering from IC/BPS (N=813; 18–80 years, M= 46.60, standard deviation [SD] 14.10) recruited from online IC/BPS support groups completed measures of demographic, pain, symptoms, and psychosocial variables. Descriptive statistics, correlations, and multivariable logistic regressions examined prevalence, variable associations, and suicide risk prediction. Results: Suicide risk prevalence was 38.1%. Suicide risk was associated with greater odds for exposure to suicide, psychache, hopelessness, and perceived burdensomeness to others. Further, examining suicide risk by levels of pain showed that exposure to suicide and hopelessness were consistent suicide risk predictors across pain levels; psychache for lower levels of pain, perceived burdensomeness in moderate and severe pain levels, and depression in moderate levels of pain. Conclusions: The high prevalence of suicide risk is alarming and signifies an imperative for recognizing this risk within the IC/BPS population. The identified psychosocial risk factors may be used in refining screening and treatment and in directing future IC/BPS research.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a painful chronic gastrointestinal disease associated with diminished quality of life. No research documents IBD body pain or the associations of pain patterns to outcomes. Objectives were to map patient body pain areas and examine the associations between pain patterns with depression, catastrophizing, pain severity, and quality of life. A cross-sectional survey was collected from consecutive tertiary-care IBD clinic patients (n = 255). Patients were classified into three pain pattern groups (No Pain; Localized Pain Only; and Widespread Pain) with more than 40% reporting widespread pain. The Localized Pain Only and Widespread Pain groups reported pain in the abdomen, the uterus/testes, vagina/penis, bladder, and pelvis/buttock areas. The body area most often reported was the anterior abdomen for the Localized Pain Only and Widespread Pain groups, with additional endorsement of lower back and anterior thigh and knees for the Widespread Pain group. The pain versus no pain patients reported greater depressive symptoms, catastrophizing, and diminished quality of life. Patients reported a variety of pain patterns during clinic visits. Widespread pain is associated with greatest pain and poorest psychosocial outcomes.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.