Johns Hopkins University.
J Health Polit Policy Law. 2018 Apr 1;43(2):185-228. doi: 10.1215/03616878-4303507.
In the ongoing national policy debate about how to best address serious mental illness (SMI), a major controversy among mental health advocates is whether drawing public attention to an apparent link between SMI and violence, shown to elevate stigma, is the optimal strategy for increasing public support for investing in mental health services or whether nonstigmatizing messages can be equally effective. We conducted a randomized experiment to examine this question. Participants in a nationally representative online panel (N = 1,326) were randomized to a control arm or to read one of three brief narratives about SMI emphasizing violence, systemic barriers to treatment, or successful treatment and recovery. Narratives, or stories about individuals, are a common communication strategy used by policy makers, advocates, and the news media. Study results showed that narratives emphasizing violence or barriers to treatment were equally effective in increasing the public's willingness to pay additional taxes to improve the mental health system (55 percent and 52 percent, vs. 42 percent in the control arm). Only the narrative emphasizing the link between SMI and violence increased stigma. For mental health advocates dedicated to improving the public mental health system, these findings offer an alternative to stigmatizing messages linking mental illness and violence.
在当前关于如何最好地解决严重精神疾病(SMI)的国家政策辩论中,心理健康倡导者之间存在一个主要争议,即引起公众对 SMI 与暴力之间明显联系的关注是否会增加污名化,从而提高公众对投资精神健康服务的支持,或者非污名化的信息是否同样有效。我们进行了一项随机实验来检验这个问题。参与者是来自全国代表性在线小组的(N=1326)被随机分配到对照组或阅读三个关于 SMI 的简短叙述之一,强调暴力、治疗的系统性障碍或成功的治疗和康复。叙述或个人故事是政策制定者、倡导者和新闻媒体常用的沟通策略。研究结果表明,强调暴力或治疗障碍的叙述在增加公众愿意支付额外税款以改善精神卫生系统方面同样有效(分别为 55%和 52%,而对照组为 42%)。只有强调 SMI 与暴力之间联系的叙述增加了污名化。对于致力于改善公众精神卫生系统的心理健康倡导者来说,这些发现为避免将精神疾病与暴力联系起来的污名化信息提供了一种替代方案。