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Social and self-stigma during COVID-19 pandemic: Egyptians' perspectives. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - A study in Egypt assessed social and self-stigma related to COVID-19 infections, finding mild stigma levels among the population but significant occurrences, with 88.2% showing social stigma towards current patients.
  • - The stigma was linked to education levels and information sources, revealing that those with lower education and who relied on social media were more affected.
  • - The study suggests improving health information dissemination through healthcare workers and recommends campaigns to combat stigma stemming from misinformation on social media.

Article Abstract

Background: Social stigma associated with infectious diseases existed throughout the history of pandemics due to fears of contagion and death. This study aims to assess social and self-stigma resulting from COVID-19 infection and other associated factors in Egypt during the pandemic.

Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted on 533 adult Egyptians via an online questionnaire. The questionnaire included social stigma toward current and recovered COVID-19 patients and the negative self-image of being a COVID-19 patient.

Results: The mean calculated overall COVID-19-related stigma score for the studied sample was 4.7±3.1. The highest reported stigma category was mild stigma: Social stigma towards current COVID-19 patients (88.2%), Social stigma toward recovered COVID-19 patients (64.2%), Negative self-image for being a COVID-19 patient; perceived self-stigma (71.6%) and total stigma score (88.2%) respectively. The overall stigma score was negatively associated with a higher level of education and getting information from healthcare workers and positively associated with getting information from social networks.

Conclusion: Social and self-stigma related to COVID-19 infection was mild from the Egyptian perspective but found in a large proportion of the population and mainly affected by getting information from healthcare workers or through social media and being more among those with lower education levels. The study recommends more legislative control on social media for disseminating health-related information and conducting awareness campaigns to counteract these adverse effects.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10118092PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0284582PLOS

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