Abstract
Despite the fact that perceptions of racialized discrimination, health-related stigma, and pain-related injustice have been associated with worse patient functioning, little is known about their unique relationships in Black youth living with sickle cell disease (SCD). In this study, we (1) examined the prevalence of perceptions of racialized discrimination, perceptions of health-related stigma, and pain-related injustice appraisals and (2) investigated how the aforementioned variables were uniquely related to functioning (i.e., functional disability, depressive, and anxiety symptoms) in Black youth living with SCD. The study sample included 30 non-Hispanic Black or African American youth living with SCD (17 male, 13 female youths). The average age of the sample was approximately 11.3 years (SD = 2.73). Zero-order correlations and hierarchical regressions were used to examine and compare the multivariate relationships between perceived racialized discrimination, perceived health-related stigma, and perceived pain-related injustice and outcome variables (functional disability, anxiety symptoms, and depressive symptoms). For functional disability, perceived racialized discrimination and perceived pain-related injustice were significant predictors in the final model (F(3,26) = 11.00, p < .01). For depressive symptoms, health-related stigma trended toward significance (p = .09) as a predictor in the final model (F(2,26) = 6.69, p < .01). For anxiety symptoms, perceived pain-related injustice was the only significant predictor in the final model (F(3,26) = 10.25, p < .001). Results suggest that the youth living with SCD experience and perceive racialized discrimination, health-related stigma, and injustice surrounding their pain experience and these factors are associated with worse outcomes.