Thoits Peggy A
Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA
J Health Soc Behav. 2016 Jun;57(2):135-51. doi: 10.1177/0022146516641164.
Mental illness identity deflection refers to rebuffing the idea that one is mentally ill. Predictors of identity deflection and its consequences for well-being were examined for individuals with mental disorders in the National Comorbidity Study-Replication (N = 1,368). Respondents more often deflected a mental illness identity if they had a nonsevere disorder, had low impairment in functioning, had no treatment experience, viewed possible treatment as undesirable, and held multiple social roles, consistent with theory about stigma resistance. Persons who deflected a mental illness identity had lower distress and more positive affect than those who accepted it, even net of disorder severity, impairment level, and treatment experience. Among those who had ever been in treatment, deflection buffered the negative effects of serious impairment but exacerbated the effects of having a severe disorder on well-being, suggesting more complex consequences of formal labeling (greater stigma but helpful services), consistent with previous research.
精神疾病身份回避是指拒绝承认自己患有精神疾病。在全国共病研究复制项目(N = 1368)中,对患有精神障碍的个体进行了身份回避的预测因素及其对幸福感影响的研究。与关于耻辱感抵抗的理论一致,如果受访者患有非严重疾病、功能损害程度低、没有治疗经历、认为可能的治疗不可取且拥有多个社会角色,他们更常回避精神疾病身份。回避精神疾病身份的人比接受该身份的人有更低的痛苦感和更积极的情绪,即使排除了疾病严重程度、损害水平和治疗经历的影响。在曾经接受过治疗的人中,身份回避缓冲了严重功能损害的负面影响,但加剧了严重疾病对幸福感的影响,这表明正式标签有更复杂的后果(更大的耻辱感但有帮助的服务),与先前的研究一致。