Publicatie

Publication date

Persistent somatic symptom related stigmatisation by healthcare professionals: a systematic review of questionnaire measurement instruments.

McGhie-Fraser, B., Lucassen, P., Ballering, A., Abma, I., Brouwers, E., Dulmen, S. van, olde Hartman, T. Persistent somatic symptom related stigmatisation by healthcare professionals: a systematic review of questionnaire measurement instruments. Journal of Psychosomatic Research: 2023, 166, p. Art. nr. 111161.
Read online
Objective
Patients with persistent somatic symptoms (PSS) experience stigmatising attitudes and behaviours by healthcare professionals. While previous research has focussed on individual manifestations of PSS related stigma, less is known about sound ways to measure stigmatisation by healthcare professionals towards patients with PSS. This review aims to assess the quality of questionnaire measurement instruments and make recommendations about their use.

Methods
A systematic review using six databases (PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, PsychINFO, Open Grey and EThoS). The search strategy combined three search strings related to healthcare professionals, PSS and stigma. Additional publications were identified by searching bibliographies. Three authors independently extracted the data. Data analysis and synthesis followed COSMIN methodology for reviews of outcome measurement instruments.

Results
We identified 90 publications that met the inclusion criteria using 62 questionnaire measurement instruments. Stereotypes were explored in 92% of instruments, prejudices in 52% of instruments, and discrimination in 19% of instruments. The development process of the instruments was not rated higher than doubtful. Construct validity, structural validity, internal consistency and reliability were the most commonly investigated measurement properties. Evidence around content validity was inconsistent or indeterminate.

Conclusion
No instrument provided acceptable evidence on all measurement properties. Many instruments were developed for use within a single publication, with little evidence of their development or establishment of content validity. This is problematic because stigma instruments should reflect the challenges that healthcare professionals face when working with patients with PSS. They should also reflect the experiences that patients with PSS have widely reported during clinical encounters.