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Lung Stigma Series
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- Original Article Quality of LifeOpen Archive
A Longitudinal Investigation of Internalized Stigma, Constrained Disclosure, and Quality of Life Across 12 Weeks in Lung Cancer Patients on Active Oncologic Treatment
Journal of Thoracic OncologyVol. 13Issue 9p1284–1293Published online: July 5, 2018- Timothy J. Williamson
- Alyssa K. Choi
- Julie C. Kim
- Edward B. Garon
- Jenessa R. Shapiro
- Michael R. Irwin
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 21Internalized lung cancer stigma (i.e., feelings of regret, shame, and self-blame about one’s lung cancer) is related to poorer psychological outcomes. Less is known about how internalized stigma relates to physical and functional outcomes or how constrained disclosure (i.e., avoidance of or discomfort about disclosing one’s lung cancer status to others) relates to well-being. Furthermore, no study has examined whether internalized stigma and constrained disclosure predict changes in well-being for lung cancer patients.