School of Social Work, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA
Int J Soc Psychiatry. 2015 May;61(3):215-24. doi: 10.1177/0020764014540147. Epub 2014 Jun 27.
Better understanding of the individual and environmental factors that promote adolescents' use of more or less adaptive coping strategies with mental illness stigma would inform interventions designed to bolster youth resilience.
This cross-sectional study draws on data from research on adolescents' well-being after discharge from a first psychiatric hospitalization to explore the relationships between anticipated coping in reaction to a hypothetical social stigma scenario, and various factors conceptualized as 'coping resource' and 'coping vulnerability' factors. Focusing on coping strategies also identified in the companion article, we hypothesize that primary and secondary control engagement coping would relate to more coping resource and less coping vulnerability factors, and the opposite would be true for disengagement, aggression/confrontation and efforts to disconfirm stereotypes.
Data were elicited from interviews with 102 adolescents within 7 days of discharge. Hypothesized coping resource factors included social resources, optimistic illness perceptions, better hospital experiences and higher self-esteem. Vulnerability factors included more previous stigma experiences, desire for concealment of treatment, more contingent self-worth, higher symptom levels and higher anticipated stress. Multivariate ordinary least squares (OLS) regression was used to analyze associations between coping strategy endorsement and correlates.
Although some coping correlates 'behaved' contrary to expectations, for the most part, our hypotheses were confirmed. As expected, youth anticipating reacting to the stigmatizing situation with greater disengagement, aggression/confrontation or efforts to disconfirm stenotypes rated significantly lower on 'coping resources' such as self-esteem and higher on vulnerability factors such as symptom severity. The opposite was true for youth who anticipated exercising more primary and secondary control engagement coping.
This study begins to identify factors that promote more and less adaptive coping strategies among youth at high risk for social stigma. Some factors that can be modified in the shorter term point to useful directions for clinical interventions.
更好地理解促进青少年使用更多或更少适应应对策略来应对精神疾病污名的个体和环境因素,将为旨在增强青年适应力的干预措施提供信息。
本横断面研究借鉴了青少年从首次精神病住院后康复研究的数据,探讨了对假设的社会污名情景的预期应对与各种被概念化为“应对资源”和“应对脆弱性”因素之间的关系。本文重点关注在同伴文章中确定的应对策略,我们假设主要和次要控制应对与更多的应对资源和更少的应对脆弱性因素相关,而反之亦然的是,脱离、攻击/对抗和努力否定刻板印象。
在出院后 7 天内,通过访谈从 102 名青少年中收集数据。假设的应对资源因素包括社会资源、乐观的疾病认知、更好的医院体验和更高的自尊。脆弱性因素包括更多以前的污名体验、对治疗的隐瞒欲望、更依赖的自我价值感、更高的症状水平和更高的预期压力。采用多元普通最小二乘法(OLS)回归分析应对策略的相关性。
尽管一些应对相关性的表现与预期相反,但在大多数情况下,我们的假设得到了证实。正如预期的那样,预计对污名化情景做出更大脱离、攻击/对抗或努力否定刻板印象反应的青少年在自我价值感等“应对资源”方面的评分显著较低,而在症状严重程度等脆弱性因素方面的评分较高。对于预计更多运用主要和次要控制应对的青少年来说,情况正好相反。
这项研究开始确定在社会污名风险较高的青少年中促进更多和更少适应应对策略的因素。一些可以在短期内改变的因素为临床干预指明了有用的方向。