Phelan Jo C, Link Bruce G
Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, Department of Sociomedical Sciences, 722 W. 168th Street, New York, NY 10032, USA.
J Health Soc Behav. 2004 Mar;45(1):68-80. doi: 10.1177/002214650404500105.
Vignette and laboratory experiments suggest that negative reactions to people with mental illness are a direct consequence of their symptomatic behavior, but because of their poor external validity, these studies cannot tell us whether widespread negative public reactions to people with mental illness actually result from observation of symptomatic behavior. Focusing on perceived danger, we use a large national survey to test the "behavior hypothesis" in the general population. We reason that, if this hypothesis is correct, contact with people with mental illnesses should be associated with more perceived danger, and exposure to threat or harm should mediate this association. On the contrary, respondents with more personal and impersonal contact perceive people with mental illness to be less dangerous. Exposure to threat is more common among people with more contact, but this exposure explains very little of the variance in perceived danger. These findings do not support the conclusion that public fear of people with mental illness is due to the observation of violent behavior.
案例和实验室实验表明,对患有精神疾病的人的负面反应是其症状性行为的直接后果,但由于这些研究的外部效度较低,它们无法告诉我们公众对患有精神疾病的人的广泛负面反应是否实际上源于对症状性行为的观察。我们聚焦于感知到的危险,利用一项大型全国性调查在普通人群中检验“行为假设”。我们推断,如果这个假设是正确的,那么与患有精神疾病的人接触应该会带来更多的感知危险,并且接触到威胁或伤害应该会调节这种关联。相反,有更多个人和非个人接触的受访者认为患有精神疾病的人危险性更低。在接触更多的人群中,接触到威胁更为常见,但这种接触对感知危险差异的解释非常少。这些发现并不支持公众对患有精神疾病的人的恐惧是由于观察到暴力行为这一结论。