The mediating role of psychological inflexibility on internalised stigma and patient outcomes in a sample of adults with [IBD] 2025 Reynolds et al

Discussion in 'Other psychosomatic news and research' started by Andy, Apr 2, 2025 at 11:17 AM.

  1. Andy

    Andy Retired committee member

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    Full title: The mediating role of psychological inflexibility on internalised stigma and patient outcomes in a sample of adults with inflammatory bowel disease

    Authors: Reynolds, Trudie Chalder, Henderson

    Abstract

    Background
    This study examined the relationship between psychological inflexibility, internalised stigma, and patient outcomes in adults with Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD). It aimed to explore if psychological inflexibility mediated the relationship between internalised stigma and patient outcomes.

    Methods
    382 participants with IBD took part in a cross-sectional quantitative study conducted via an online survey from May to December 2020. Participants completed questionnaires which assessed psychological inflexibility, committed action, internalised stigma related to IBD, psychological distress, IBD self-efficacy, self-concealment, beliefs about emotions, and fatigue. Participants also completed a sociodemographic and clinical questionnaire in addition to a bespoke Covid-19 questionnaire. Pearson’s correlations and exploratory simple mediation analyses were used to examine relationships between variables and the mediating effect of psychological inflexibility.

    Results
    40.5% of participants experienced internalised stigma. Higher psychological inflexibility was associated with higher internalised stigma, lower committed action, poorer health-related quality of life, lower IBD self-efficacy, higher self-concealment, higher fatigue, and more negative beliefs about emotions. Psychological inflexibility partially mediated the relationship between internalised stigma and several patient outcomes (psychological distress, IBD health-related quality of life, IBD self-efficacy, and self-concealment) and completely mediated the relationship between internalised stigma and fatigue.

    Conclusion
    Psychological inflexibility significantly impacts quality of life in individuals with internalised stigma related to IBD and mediates the relationship between internalised stigma and patient outcomes. Increasing psychological flexibility in adults with IBD may reduce distress and enhance quality of life. Longitudinal studies and trials of psychological interventions targeting psychological flexibility warrant exploration.

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  2. Utsikt

    Utsikt Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Putting all of the issues with the psychological concepts they describe aside: I wonder when Chalder is going to learn the difference between correlation and causation.
     
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  3. Chestnut tree

    Chestnut tree Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    People who have ‘psychological inflexibility’ or people with excellent bs radars?
     
    MEMarge, oldtimer, alktipping and 3 others like this.
  4. Sean

    Sean Moderator Staff Member

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    Real mystery why people who experience serious deterioration in their health when they do certain things would want to avoid doing those things.

    Is being wary of going near the edge of a high cliff a 'psychological inflexibility'?
     

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