Yanos Philip T, Roe David, Lysaker Paul H
John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York, Psychology Department.
Am J Psychiatr Rehabil. 2010 Apr;13(2):73-93. doi: 10.1080/15487761003756860.
The impact of the experience and diagnosis of mental illness on one's identity has long been recognized; however, little is known about the impact of illness identity, which we define as the set of roles and attitudes that a person has developed in relation to his or her understanding of having a mental illness. The present article proposes a theoretically driven model of the impact of illness identity on the course and recovery from severe mental illness and reviews relevant research. We propose that accepting a definition of oneself as mentally ill and assuming that mental illness means incompetence and inadequacy impact hope and self-esteem, which further impact suicide risk, coping, social interaction, vocational functioning, and symptom severity. Evidence supports most of the predictions made by the model. Implications for psychiatric rehabilitation services are discussed.
精神疾病的经历和诊断对个人身份认同的影响早已为人所知;然而,对于疾病身份认同的影响却知之甚少,我们将疾病身份认同定义为一个人在对自己患有精神疾病的理解基础上所形成的一系列角色和态度。本文提出了一个理论驱动的模型,阐述疾病身份认同对严重精神疾病病程和康复的影响,并回顾了相关研究。我们认为,接受自己患有精神疾病的定义,并认为精神疾病意味着无能和不足,会影响希望和自尊,进而影响自杀风险、应对方式、社会交往、职业功能和症状严重程度。证据支持该模型所做的大部分预测。文中还讨论了对精神科康复服务的启示。