Lung cancer screening and stigma: Do smoking-related differences in perceived lung cancer stigma emerge prior to diagnosis? Journal Article


Authors: Williamson, T. J.; Rawl, S. M.; Kale, M. S.; Carter-Harris, L.
Article Title: Lung cancer screening and stigma: Do smoking-related differences in perceived lung cancer stigma emerge prior to diagnosis?
Abstract: Most lung cancer patients report experiencing stigma (i.e., devaluation based on one's lung cancer diagnosis), which is associated with adverse health outcomes. Lung cancer is stigmatized due to its robust association with smoking and the perception of the disease as self-inflicted. Identifying sociodemographic and smoking-related correlates of perceived stigma among lung cancer screening-eligible adults (early in the cancer care trajectory) is needed to guide proactive psychosocial interventions to reduce stigma and improve health for patients newly diagnosed with lung cancer. A national sample of lung cancer screening-eligible adults (N = 515; 64.9% female) completed questionnaires on sociodemographic information, smoking-related characteristics, and perceived smoking-related lung cancer stigma. Zero-order and multivariate relationships between sociodemographic variables, smoking-related characteristics, and stigma were evaluated using Pearson's correlations, t tests, ANOVAs, and multivariable regression. The multivariable regression demonstrated that younger age (b = -0.05, p = .047) was associated significantly with higher stigma. Additionally, women (b = 0.63, p = .015), participants who reported Hispanic/Latino ethnicity (b = 1.07, p = .049), and those with a college degree or higher (all p <= .029) reported significantly higher stigma, compared to men, those who did not report Hispanic/Latino ethnicity, and other education categories, respectively. None of the smoking-related characteristics were associated significantly with perceived stigma (all p > .12). Sociodemographic variables (rather than smoking-related characteristics) significantly and uniquely differentiated lung cancer screening-eligible adults' perception of lung cancer stigma. Smoking-related differences in lung cancer stigma may emerge following rather than prior to diagnosis. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords: lung cancer; screening; stigma; smoking history; smoking status
Journal Title: Stigma and Health
Volume: 8
Issue: 4
ISSN: 2376-6972
Publisher: Educational Publishing Foundation American Psychological Assoc  
Date Published: 2023-11-01
Start Page: 497
End Page: 500
Language: English
ACCESSION: 2021-34771-001
DOI: 10.1037/sah0000300
PROVIDER: Ovid Technologies
PROVIDER: psycinfo
PMCID: PMC10794004
PUBMED: 38239631
DOI/URL:
Notes: References -- Source: APA PsycInfo
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