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Background: Head and neck cancer is the most common cancer around the globe, following lung cancer and breast cancer. Treatment at advanced stages of head and neck cancer is usually followed intense surgical procedures, which leads to mutilation among patients. Mutilation imparts a sense of disgrace and causes a feeling of shame and stigma in the patient. The feeling of shame and stigma persists over time and affects the overall long-term survival of patients by deteriorating their quality of life.
Objectives: Since shame and stigma is an important psychological domain of head and neck cancer, the present article aims toward evaluating the studies published so far for the assessment of shame and stigma in head and neck cancer and highlighting the lacunae in the existing research designs. The present study also aims to design a checklist that could be followed while developing, translating, or validating a psychometric instrument that aims to measure shame and stigma in head and neck cancer.
Methods: In the present metanalysis, all articles published in the past years on shame and stigma in head and neck cancer was compiled using a predefined data extraction matrix. The available literature was compiled for major objectives of the study, the sample size used, major findings, and critical lacunae that need to be addressed.
Results: Shame and stigma is a very important domain of psychological well-being in head and neck cancer patients, which yet not appropriately addressed and further need to be researched.
Conclusion: Future studies could be based on the lacunae highlighted in the existing literature, and the prescribed methodology checklist could be taken into consideration while conducting further studies involving developing, translating, or validating a psychometric instrument related to shame and stigma in the head and neck cancer.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12663-021-01658-2 | DOI Listing |
Health Commun
September 2025
Communication Studies Department, Coe College.
Many women in intimate relationships with violent partners often report facing stigma related to intimate partner violence (IPV), which typically includes blame, shame, discrimination, loss of status, dismissal, or isolation. Researchers studying IPV and stigma have yet to examine the content of stigmatizing messages from informal support networks, which may resonate with women for an extended period - - and contribute to the persistence of their adverse outcomes. To address this gap, this qualitative study explored the content of memorable stigmatizing messages in the accounts of twenty-eight women affected by IPV living in the United States.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany Americans report having a concealable stigmatized identity (CSI) - when one belongs to a group that is devalued by society, but membership can be hidden - which is linked with poor health outcomes. One factor consistently linked with poor health among people with CSIs is anticipated stigma. The current study uses structural equation modeling to examine how responses to anticipated stigma (shame, spontaneous self-affirmation) explain the relationship between anticipated stigma and poor health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Womens Health
August 2025
School of Nursing Science, Gyungkuk National University, Andong, South Korea.
Background: Infertility is a global reproductive health concern that imposes intense psychological and social burdens, particularly in cultural contexts where childbearing is integral to the construction of womanhood.
Objective: This qualitative meta-synthesis aimed to gain an in-depth understanding how women experiencing infertility across diverse settings experience stigma, and how they navigate its psychological and relational consequences.
Methods: A systematic search was conducted using six electronic databases (PubMed, CINAHL Plus with Full Text, JSTOR, ProQuest Central, Web of Science, and Ovid MEDLINE), supplemented by manual searches.
J Ethn Subst Abuse
September 2025
Department of English, An-Najah National University, Nablus, Palestine.
Shisha (waterpipe) smoking in Palestine is a social practice shaped by gender norms. This qualitative study examines the experiences of 50 university students (28 females, 22 males) at An-Najah National University, focusing on how shisha use reflects broader negotiations of autonomy, identity, and social control. Thematic analysis identified six themes: shisha as sanctuary and escape; social surveillance and stigma; honor and shame; health discourses and double standards; peer dynamics and gendered exclusion; and agency in redefining womanhood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF