Bill Wilson Center, San Jose, CA 95126, USA.
Soc Work. 2011 Oct;56(4):317-25. doi: 10.1093/sw/56.4.317.
In this study, the attitudes toward and beliefs about serious mental illness (SMI) held by a group of graduate social work students in the northwestern United States were examined. Mental health stigma was examined with relation to the following factors:participants'level of social contact with SMI populations, adherence to stereotypes about SMI populations, belief in the ability to recover from SMI, and the belief that SMI defines an individual's identity. Measures used to identify mental health stigma included the desire for social distance and restrictions with relation to the SMI population. Survey results from 71 graduate social work students found that a significant number of participants who engaged in friendships with SMI-diagnosed individuals had less desire for social distance from and restrictions toward SMI populations. Participants who indicated that they believed in stereotypes of dangerousness and believed that SMI defines an individual's identity were more likely to express desire for both social distance and restrictions. Implications for social work and further research on the matter are discussed.
本研究考察了美国西北部一群研究生社会工作学生对严重精神疾病(SMI)的态度和信念。精神卫生污名与以下因素有关:参与者与 SMI 人群的社会接触程度、对 SMI 人群的刻板印象的坚持、对从 SMI 中康复的能力的信念,以及认为 SMI 定义个人身份的信念。用于识别精神卫生污名的措施包括与 SMI 人群相关的社会距离和限制的愿望。对 71 名研究生社会工作学生的调查结果发现,与 SMI 诊断个体有友谊交往的参与者中,有相当数量的人表示希望与 SMI 人群保持社会距离,并限制与他们交往。表示相信危险的刻板印象,并认为 SMI 定义个人身份的参与者更有可能表达对社会距离和限制的渴望。对社会工作的影响以及对此事的进一步研究进行了讨论。