Litcius/Paper detail

Dispositional shame and guilt as predictors of depressive symptoms and anxiety among adults with lung cancer: The mediational role of internalized stigma.

Timothy J. Williamson, Jamie S. Ostroff, Noshin Haque, Chloé M. Martin, Heidi Hamann, Smita C. Banerjee, Megan Johnson Shen

2020Stigma and Health35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: The current study investigated whether dispositional tendencies to experience shame and guilt (i.e., shame- and guilt- proneness) were associated with higher levels of internalized stigma and, in turn, higher depressive symptoms and anxiety in adults with lung cancer. METHOD: = 50, 56.0% female) were men and women who received a clinical consultation for lung cancer and completed validated questionnaires. Mediation modeling using bootstrapping was used to characterize relationships between shame- and guilt-proneness, lung cancer stigma, depressive symptoms, and anxiety. RESULTS: = .20, 95% CI [0.08, 0.89]) but not between shame-proneness and depressive symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Shame- and guilt-proneness are associated significantly with depressive symptoms and anxiety, respectively, and the relationship between guilt-proneness and anxiety is explained in part by internalized stigma in a sample of newly diagnosed lung cancer patients. Findings carry implications for the early identification of lung cancer patients in need of additional supportive care services and highlight internalized stigma as a target for psychosocial intervention.

Topics & Concepts

ShameAnxietyClinical psychologyPsychologyPsychosocialLung cancerMediationDepressive symptomsStigma (botany)Psycho-oncologyPsychiatryMedicineInternal medicineSocial psychologyPolitical scienceLawCancer survivorship and carePosttraumatic Stress Disorder ResearchFamily Support in Illness
Dispositional shame and guilt as predictors of depressive symptoms and anxiety among adults with lung cancer: The mediational role of internalized stigma. | Litcius