Centre for Applied Psychology,University of Canberra,Canberra,Australia.
National Institute for Mental Health Research, The Australian National University,Canberra,Australia.
Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci. 2016 Jun;25(3):247-54. doi: 10.1017/S2045796015000220. Epub 2015 Mar 20.
Stigma towards individuals experiencing a mental illness is associated with a range of negative psychological, social and financial outcomes. Factors associated with stigma remain unclear; the relationship between stigma and various personal factors may depend on both the type of disorder being stigmatised and what type of stigma is assessed. Different forms of stigma include personal stigma (negative attitudes towards others), perceived stigma (perceived attitudes of others) and self-stigma (self-attribution of others' negative attitudes).
Three hundred and fifty university students and members of the general public completed an online survey assessing contact with and knowledge of both depression and anxiety, age, gender, current depression and anxiety symptoms, and personal, perceived and self-stigma for both depression and anxiety.
Greater contact with, and knowledge of that illness predicted lower personal stigma for both anxiety and depression. Participants with greater levels of current depression symptomatology and females, reported higher perceived stigma towards depression. Males reported higher personal stigma for anxiety. For both anxiety and depression, higher current symptomatology was associated with greater levels of self-stigma towards the illness.
Findings confirm the role of contact and knowledge in personal stigma for both disorders, consistent with previous findings. This finding also supports evidence that interventions addressing these factors are associated with a decline in personal stigma. However, lack of relationship between contact with, and knowledge of a mental illness and perceived and self-stigma for either depression or anxiety suggests that these factors may not play a major role in perceived or self-stigma. The identification of symptomatology as a key factor associated with self-stigma for both anxiety and depression is significant, and has implications for community-wide interventions aiming to increase help-seeking behaviour, as well as individual treatment strategies for clinicians. Further research should examine whether these relationships hold for groups with clinically diagnosed depression and anxiety disorders.
对经历精神疾病的个体的污名化与一系列负面的心理、社会和经济后果有关。与污名相关的因素仍不清楚;污名与各种个人因素之间的关系可能取决于被污名化的障碍类型和评估的污名类型。不同形式的污名包括个人污名(对他人的负面态度)、感知污名(他人的感知态度)和自我污名(自我归因于他人的负面态度)。
350 名大学生和普通公众完成了一项在线调查,评估他们与抑郁和焦虑的接触和了解程度、年龄、性别、当前抑郁和焦虑症状以及对抑郁和焦虑的个人、感知和自我污名。
与疾病的接触和了解程度越高,对抑郁和焦虑的个人污名越低。当前抑郁症状水平较高和女性报告对抑郁的感知污名较高。男性报告对焦虑的个人污名较高。对抑郁和焦虑而言,当前症状越严重,对该疾病的自我污名程度越高。
研究结果证实了接触和了解在两种疾病的个人污名下的作用,与先前的发现一致。这一发现还支持了这样的证据,即针对这些因素的干预措施与个人污名的下降有关。然而,与接触和了解一种精神疾病以及对抑郁或焦虑的感知和自我污名之间缺乏关系表明,这些因素可能在感知或自我污名中不起主要作用。将症状学确定为与焦虑和抑郁的自我污名都相关的关键因素具有重要意义,这对旨在增加寻求帮助行为的全社区干预以及临床医生的个体治疗策略都有影响。进一步的研究应检验这些关系是否适用于有临床诊断的抑郁和焦虑障碍的群体。