Quality of life and stigmatization in people with skin diseases in Europe: A large survey from the ‘burden of skin diseases’ <scp>EADV</scp> project
Clinical Summary
View sourceWhat was studied
A population-based survey of European adults (≥18 years) who self-reported at least one skin problem in the prior 12 months, assessing quality of life (DLQI), work life, anxiety/depression, and stigmatization.
Key findings
Among 19,915 participants (44.7% men), quality of life was most impaired in hidradenitis suppurativa and sexually transmitted diseases; about half of those with acne, alopecia, or chronic urticaria and about 40% with atopic dermatitis, skin cancers, or psoriasis reported a modest to extremely large DLQI impact. Overall, 88.1% felt embarrassed in personal life, 83% at work; ~50% reported sleep difficulty, fatigue, and self-care impact; 14.5% felt rejected and 19.2% felt looked at with disgust; anxiety and depression were frequently reported across diseases.
Study limitations
Skin diseases were self-reported without clinical confirmation. Details on country-level differences, response rates, and temporal trends were not provided in the summary.
Clinical implications
Expect substantial quality-of-life impairment, stigma, sleep problems, and mental health symptoms across common skin diseases; routinely assess DLQI and screen for anxiety/depression and work-life impact in adult patients.
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