The relationship between social anxiety and felt stigma in patients with epilepsy: A network analysis.

2021 
Abstract Purpose Felt stigma and social anxiety are both common in patients with epilepsy (PWE) and they share an important relationship. Here in the present study, we investigated how social anxiety and different concepts of felt stigma relate to each other in PWE in order to provide some suggestions for the prevention and intervention of social anxiety and felt stigma in PWE. Methods A total of 189 patients with epilepsy were enrolled in our study. Social anxiety was evaluated with the Liebowitz social anxiety scale. Felt stigma was evaluated with the Kilifi stigma scale for epilepsy. The data were subjected to network analysis. Results The findings indicated that eight edges with the strongest regularized partial correlations existed in the network, such as the edge between S3 “Embarrassed” and S4 “Disappointed”, and the edge between S14 “Discriminate” and S15 “Outcast”. In addition, S10 “Inferior” and S11 “Avoid” had the highest strength and predictability. The flow network of social anxiety indicated that most concepts of felt stigma were directly connected with social anxiety. The strongest edge existed between S8 “Uncomfortable” and social anxiety, while S6 “Society” and S5 “Rewarding life” were also closely connected with social anxiety. Conclusion The current study highlighted the critical central concept S10 “Inferior” and critical concepts associated with social anxiety, including S8 “Uncomfortable”, S6 “Society” and S5 “Rewarding life”. The findings revealed in this study may offer some help in the clinical prevention and intervention of felt stigma and social anxiety in PWE. However, all of the conclusions above need further confirmatory studies to validate them.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    40
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []