Corrigan Patrick, Thompson Vetta, Lambert David, Sangster Yvette, Noel Jeffrey G, Campbell Jean
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, Illinois, 60477, USA.
Psychiatr Serv. 2003 Aug;54(8):1105-10. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.54.8.1105.
The authors sought to gain further perspective on discrimination experienced by persons with mental illness by comparing self-reports of discrimination due to mental illness to self-reports of discrimination due to other group characteristics, such as race, gender, and sexual orientation.
A total of 1,824 persons with serious mental illness who participated in a baseline interview for a multistate study on consumer-operated services completed a two-part discrimination questionnaire. The first part of the questionnaire assessed participants' perceptions about discrimination due to mental illness as well as more than half a dozen other group characteristics. The second part of the questionnaire asked participants who reported some experience with discrimination to identify areas in which this discrimination occurred, such as employment, education, and housing.
More than half of the study participants (949 participants, or 53 percent) reported some experience with discrimination. The most frequent sources of this discrimination were mental disability, race, sexual orientation, and physical disability. Areas in which discrimination frequently occurred included employment, housing, and interactions with law enforcement. Areas in which discrimination was experienced did not significantly differ among groups of study participants characterized by mental disability, race, gender, sexual orientation, or physical disability.
Discrimination based on group characteristics other than mental illness does not diminish the impact of stigma associated with mental illness. Antistigma programs need to target not only discrimination related to mental illness but also that associated with other group characteristics, such as race, gender, sexual orientation, and physical disability.
作者试图通过比较因精神疾病遭受歧视的自我报告与因种族、性别和性取向等其他群体特征遭受歧视的自我报告,来进一步了解精神疾病患者所经历的歧视情况。
共有1824名患有严重精神疾病的人参与了一项关于消费者运营服务的多州研究的基线访谈,他们完成了一份两部分的歧视调查问卷。问卷的第一部分评估了参与者对因精神疾病以及其他六个以上群体特征而遭受歧视的看法。问卷的第二部分要求报告有过歧视经历的参与者指出这种歧视发生的领域,如就业、教育和住房。
超过一半的研究参与者(949名参与者,即53%)报告有过歧视经历。这种歧视最常见的来源是精神残疾、种族、性取向和身体残疾。歧视经常发生的领域包括就业、住房以及与执法部门的互动。在以精神残疾、种族、性别、性取向或身体残疾为特征的研究参与者群体中,经历歧视的领域没有显著差异。
基于精神疾病以外的群体特征的歧视并不会减少与精神疾病相关的污名化影响。反污名化项目不仅需要针对与精神疾病相关的歧视,还需要针对与种族、性别、性取向和身体残疾等其他群体特征相关的歧视。