De Montfort University, Leicester, UK.
Mental Health Care and Research Foundation, Kochi, Kerala, India.
Int J Soc Psychiatry. 2023 Mar;69(2):362-369. doi: 10.1177/00207640221091187. Epub 2022 May 13.
The concept of stigma has been widely used to understand patterns of discrimination and negative ideas surrounding people with mental health problems, yet we know little of the specific nuances of how this might operate beyond the 'Global North'.
This paper aims to explore the notion of stigma in an Indian context by considering the lived experience of patients, carers and community members.
A sample of 204 participants, representing mental health patients, informal carers and community members was recruited from urban and rural areas in Kerala, India. Participants took part in interviews where they were encouraged to talk about their experiences of mental ill health, attitudes towards these problems, barriers encountered and sources of support.
Experiences akin to the experience of stigma in Europe and the United States were elicited but there were important local dimensions specific to the Indian context. The difficulties faced by people with diagnoses of mental disorders in finding marriage partners was seen as an important problem, leading to marriage proposals being refused in some cases, and secrecy on the part of those with mental health problems. Rather than the 'self-stigma' identified in the US, participants were more likely to see this as a collective problem in that it could reflect badly on the family group as a whole rather than just the sufferer.
In the Indian context, the idioms of stigma emphasised impairments in marriage eligibility and the implications for the family group rather than just the self.
污名化的概念被广泛用于理解围绕精神健康问题人群的歧视和负面观念模式,但我们对其在“北方国家”以外的具体细微差别知之甚少。
本文旨在通过考虑印度患者、护理者和社区成员的生活经历,探讨印度语境下污名化的概念。
从印度喀拉拉邦的城市和农村地区招募了 204 名参与者,他们代表精神健康患者、非正式护理者和社区成员。参与者参加了访谈,鼓励他们谈论自己的精神健康问题经历、对这些问题的态度、遇到的障碍和支持来源。
得出了与欧洲和美国相似的污名化体验,但也有印度特有的重要地方层面。被诊断患有精神障碍的人在寻找婚姻伴侣方面所面临的困难被视为一个重要问题,导致在某些情况下被拒绝求婚,以及精神健康问题患者的保密。与美国所识别的“自我污名化”不同,参与者更倾向于将其视为一个集体问题,因为这可能会对整个家庭群体产生负面影响,而不仅仅是患者本人。
在印度语境下,污名化的惯用表达强调了婚姻资格的障碍以及对家庭群体的影响,而不仅仅是自我。