Comparing labels for persistent physical symptoms: A cross-sectional study among lay participants and healthcare professionals.

Publication date: Aug 01, 2025

Numerous labels are used to describe physical symptoms that remain for at least several months and cause significant distress (i. e., persistent physical symptoms, PPS). This study aims to assess attitudes associated with various labels among lay participants and healthcare professionals. Participants recruited via mailing lists of volunteers completed an online questionnaire assessing their views on underlying physical and mental causations for ten diagnostic labels accounting for PPS. Lay participants rated their feelings of offence associated with each label, and healthcare professionals their willingness to take care of a patient diagnosed with each label. Mixed regression models investigated the factors associated with feelings of offence and willingness to care. 266 lay participants (mean age: 43; 70 % women) and 126 healthcare professionals (mean age: 42; 69 % women) were included. Labels rated high on perceived mental causation tended to be rated low on physical causation and vice versa in both populations, although this effect was stronger in lay participants. “Long COVID”, “persistent physical symptoms” and “functional symptoms” were rated with higher physical causation by lay participants compared to health professionals (p

Concepts Keywords
Accounting Adult
Healthcare COVID-19
Psychosom Cross-Sectional Studies
Volunteers Female
Health Personnel
Humans
Male
Medically Unexplained Symptoms
Medically unexplained symptoms
Middle Aged
Persistent symptoms
Post-acute COVID-19 syndrome
Social stigma
Somatoform Disorders
Surveys and Questionnaires

Semantics

Type Source Name
drug DRUGBANK Pentaerythritol tetranitrate
disease MESH Long COVID
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH Social stigma
disease MESH Somatoform Disorders

Original Article

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