The Roles of Lifetime Enacted Stigma in Tic Symptoms among Young Adults with Tourette Syndrome

Author:

Shiu Chengshi12,Chen Wei‐Ti2ORCID,Kim Boram2,Ricketts Emily3,Stiede Jordan T.45,Espil Flint M.6,Specht Matthew W.7,Woods Douglas W.4,Piacentini John3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Social Work and Taiwan Social Resilient Research Center National Taiwan University Taipei Taiwan

2. School of Nursing University of California Los Angeles California USA

3. Department of Psychology Marquette University Milwaukee Wisconsin USA

4. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Baylor College of Medicine Houston Texas USA

5. Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences University of California Los Angeles California USA

6. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Stanford University Stanford California USA

7. Department of Psychiatry Weill Cornell Medicine New York New York USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAlthough rarely framed as enacted stigma, adults with Tourette syndrome (ATS) have long suffered from discrimination associated with their tic symptoms. Given the high stress levels of enacted stigma that ATS experience, it is expected that their tic symptoms are profoundly impacted. However, the evidence linking enacted stigma to ATS's tic symptoms remains limited.MethodsThis study used a secondary data‐analysis approach to reanalyze the data from the follow‐up phase of a multi‐centered, randomized controlled trial in which a behavioral intervention was tested for its efficacy in managing tic symptoms. This study first conducted psychometric testing on a list of 16 enacted stigma events across five life stages and identified the underlying factor structure. The Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (YGTSS) was used to assess severity and impairment of current tic symptoms, whereas the Clinical Global Impression of Severity scale (CGI) was used to obtain the gestalt of clinical judgment on tic severity. A series of multivariate linear models were then fitted to test the relationships between different types of lifetime enacted stigma and current tic symptoms.ResultsThe analytic sample included 73 young ATS (average age of 23.2 [standard deviation = 2.5] years). The factor analysis identified three types of enacted stigmas: “traumatic events,” “confrontations,” and “subtle mistreatments.” In multivariate models, traumatic events significantly associated with YGTSS‐severity, whereas subtle mistreatments provided additional explanations for CGI.ConclusionsEnacted stigma may play important roles in shaping ATS's current tics symptom severity and, therefore, should be carefully considered in future intervention development.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

Tourette Association of America

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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