Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Leipzig Medical Center, Leipzig, Germany.
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Greifswald, Greifswald, Germany.
PLoS One. 2021 Oct 18;16(10):e0258782. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0258782. eCollection 2021.
Victims of childhood trauma report shame and anticipation of stigma, leading to non-disclosure and avoidance of help. Stigma is potentially aggravating the mental health consequences of childhood trauma. So far there is no comprehensive study examining stigma toward adult survivors of various forms of childhood trauma, and it is unclear whether stigma interferes with reaching out to affected individuals. In a vignette study based on a representative sample of the German general population (N = 1320; 47.7% male) we randomly allocated participants to brief case vignettes pertaining to past childhood sexual/physical abuse or accidents, and adult physical abuse. Stigma was elicited by applying the Social Distance Scale, assessing respondents' attitudes/stereotypes toward the persons in the vignette and their reluctance to address the specific trauma in conversation. While one aim was to establish the prevalence of stigma toward persons with CT, we hypothesized that attitudes differ according to type of trauma. Of the respondents, 45% indicated they were unlikely to reach out to a victim of childhood sexual abuse, 38% to a victim of childhood physical abuse, 31% to someone reporting a childhood accident and 25% to someone reporting adult physical abuse. Contrary to our expectations, childhood sexual abuse did not consistently elicit more stigma than childhood physical abuse in Krukall-Wallis tests. Equally, childhood interpersonal trauma did not consistently elicit more stigma than childhood accidental trauma. Structural equation modeling revealed social distance as mediator of the relationship between negative stereotypes and reluctance to address childhood trauma in conversation. Our analyses further revealed an ambiguous role of negative stereotypes in addressing childhood trauma in conversation with trauma victims, which has yet to be examined. There is evidence for stigma associated with having survived childhood trauma, which is interfering with offering help.
童年创伤的受害者会感到羞耻和对污名的预期,从而导致不披露和避免寻求帮助。污名可能会加重童年创伤的心理健康后果。到目前为止,还没有一项全面的研究检查过对各种形式的童年创伤的成年幸存者的污名,也不清楚污名是否会干扰对受影响个体的援助。在一项基于德国普通人群代表性样本的情景研究(N=1320;47.7%为男性)中,我们随机分配参与者阅读过去的童年性/身体虐待或事故以及成年身体虐待的简短案例情景。通过应用社会距离量表来引出污名,评估受访者对情景中的人的态度/刻板印象以及他们在对话中不愿提及特定创伤的程度。虽然我们的一个目标是确定对 CT 患者的污名的普遍性,但我们假设态度会根据创伤类型而有所不同。在受访者中,有 45%的人表示他们不太可能向童年性虐待的受害者伸出援手,38%的人不太可能向童年身体虐待的受害者伸出援手,31%的人不太可能向报告童年事故的人伸出援手,25%的人不太可能向报告成年身体虐待的人伸出援手。与我们的预期相反,在 Krukall-Wallis 检验中,童年性虐待并不总是比童年身体虐待引起更多的污名。同样,童年人际创伤并不总是比童年意外创伤引起更多的污名。结构方程模型显示,社会距离是负面刻板印象与不愿在对话中提及童年创伤之间关系的中介。我们的分析进一步揭示了负面刻板印象在与创伤受害者讨论童年创伤时的作用存在模糊性,这一点尚未得到检验。有证据表明,与幸存童年创伤相关的污名正在干扰提供帮助。