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Mediating role of fear of progression between sensory processing sensitivity and stigma in lung cancer patients: a cross-sectional study† Cover

Mediating role of fear of progression between sensory processing sensitivity and stigma in lung cancer patients: a cross-sectional study†

Open Access
|Dec 2024

Abstract

Objective

To explore the association of sensory processing sensitivity (SPS) and stigma as well as the mediating role of fear of progression (FoP) in lung cancer patients.

Methods

Two hundred and forty-two lung cancer patients completed a self-reported questionnaire, which included the highly sensitive person scale (HSPS), fear of progression questionnaire-short form (FoP-Q-SF), and the Cataldo Lung Cancer Stigma Scale (CLCSS).

Results

CLCSS was positively correlated with FoP (Pearson correlation = 0.217, P < 0.01) and HSPS (Pearson correlation = 0.187, P < 0.01), FoP was positively correlated with HSPS (Pearson correlation = 0.199, P < 0.01). FoP played a mediating role between SPS and stigma (a × b = 0.025, 95% confidence intervals [CI] [0.004, 0.054]), and the proportion of mediating effect (ab/c) was 21% (ab = 0.025, c = 0.120).

Conclusions

Patients with higher SPS reported higher level of stigma, and FoP has a mediating role between SPS and stigma. Our discussion deemed that psychological intervention may help higher SPS patients reduce the harm of FoP and further reduce stigma.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/fon-2024-0041 | Journal eISSN: 2544-8994 | Journal ISSN: 2097-5368
Language: English
Page range: 373 - 378
Submitted on: Jan 12, 2024
Accepted on: Mar 25, 2024
Published on: Dec 16, 2024
Published by: Shanxi Medical Periodical Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 times per year

© 2024 Nan Shen, Jiao Yang, Qian-Rong Yang, Ruo-Jia Wu, Jing Yang, Kai-Wen Dong, Yan-Qiu Zhao, Xiu-Mei Yang, published by Shanxi Medical Periodical Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.