Author:
Toumi Mondher,Wallace Jack,Cohen Chari,Marshall Chris,Kitchen Helen,Macey Jake,Pegram Hannah,Slagle Ashley F.,Gish Robert G.,Ning Qin,Yatsuhashi Hiroshi,Cornberg Markus,Brunetto Maurizia,van Bömmel Florian,Xie Qing,Lee Dee,Habuka Noriyuki,Sbarigia Urbano,Beumont-Mauviel Maria,Keever Angelina Villasis,Takahashi Yasushi,Lu Yiwei,Liu Ao,Chen Qiaoqiao,Ito Tetsuro,Radunz Olaf,Puggina Anna,Hilgard Gudrun,Chan Eric K.H.,Wang Su
Abstract
Abstract
Background
People with chronic hepatitis B (CHB) commonly experience social and self-stigma. This study sought to understand the impacts of CHB-related stigma and a functional cure on stigma.
Methods
Adults with CHB with a wide range of age and education were recruited from 5 countries and participated in 90-minute qualitative, semi-structured interviews to explore concepts related to CHB-associated stigma and its impact. Participants answered open-ended concept-elicitation questions regarding their experience of social and self-stigma, and the potential impact of reduced CHB-related stigma.
Results
Sixty-three participants aged 25 to 71 years (15 from the United States and 12 each from China, Germany, Italy, and Japan) reported emotional, lifestyle, and social impacts of living with CHB, including prejudice, marginalization, and negative relationship and work experiences. Self-stigma led to low self-esteem, concealment of CHB status, and social withdrawal. Most participants stated a functional cure for hepatitis B would reduce self-stigma.
Conclusions
CHB-related social and self-stigma are widely prevalent and affect many aspects of life. A functional cure for hepatitis B may reduce social and self-stigma and substantially improve the health-related quality of life of people with CHB. Incorporating stigma into guidelines along with infectivity considerations may broaden the patient groups who should receive treatment.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC