Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Medicine Greifswald, Ellernholzstraße 1-2, 17485, Greifswald, Germany.
Department of Health and Prevention, Institute of Psychology, Greifswald University, Robert Blum Straße 13, 17487, Greifswald, Germany.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2020 Jul;55(7):907-916. doi: 10.1007/s00127-019-01787-7. Epub 2019 Oct 22.
Personal and perceived stigma can hinder persons in appraising their symptoms as constituting part of a mental illness (self-labeling), an important early step in the help-seeking process. This study examines the impact of personal and perceived stigma on self-labeling and provides prospective data on the possible connections between self-labeling and help-seeking behavior.
Personal stigmatizing attitudes, perceived stigma and self-labeling behavior as well as their statistical connections were cross-sectionally investigated in a community sample of 207 participants with a present untreated mental health problem. We further conducted prospective analyses to investigate possible associations between self-labeling and help-seeking behavior at 3 and 6 month follow-ups. Socio-demographics, previous treatment and depression symptoms were also measured as potential confounders.
Personal stigmatizing attitudes were significantly more pronounced in respondents who self-labeled as physically compared to mentally ill, while group differences in levels of perceived stigma were not. Self-labeling as physically or mentally ill increased the likelihood of seeking help from the health service provider deemed most suitable for that label (physical: GP, p <0.05; mental: MHP, p < 0.1) compared to persons who applied no self-label.
The findings suggest that personal stigmatizing attitudes-rather than perceived stigma-impact on self-labeling, and highlight the need for interventions that assist persons with mental illness in overcoming those attitudes. They also underscore the possible impact of self-labeling in the help-seeking process and underline the important role of GPs in mental health care. Further, preferably epidemiological research into the matter would be desirable.
个人和感知到的耻辱感可能会阻碍人们将自己的症状视为精神疾病的一部分(自我标记),这是寻求帮助过程中的重要早期步骤。本研究考察了个人和感知到的耻辱感对自我标记的影响,并提供了关于自我标记与寻求帮助行为之间可能联系的前瞻性数据。
在一个有未治疗的心理健康问题的 207 名社区参与者的横断面研究中,我们调查了个人污名化态度、感知耻辱感和自我标记行为及其统计关联。我们还进行了前瞻性分析,以调查自我标记与 3 个月和 6 个月随访时寻求帮助行为之间的可能关联。社会人口统计学、以前的治疗和抑郁症状也被测量为潜在的混杂因素。
与自我标记为精神疾病相比,自我标记为身体疾病的受访者的个人污名化态度明显更为明显,而感知耻辱感的群体差异并不明显。自我标记为身体或精神疾病会增加向被认为最适合该标签的卫生服务提供者寻求帮助的可能性(身体:GP,p<0.05;精神:MHP,p<0.1),而不是自我标记为无的人。
研究结果表明,个人污名化态度而不是感知耻辱感会影响自我标记,并强调需要干预措施来帮助有精神疾病的人克服这些态度。它们还强调了自我标记在寻求帮助过程中的可能影响,并强调了全科医生在精神卫生保健中的重要作用。此外,最好进行该问题的流行病学研究。