Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Leipzig Medical Centre, Leipzig, Germany.
Department of Journalism and Communication Research, Hannover University of Music, Drama, and Media, Hannover, Germany.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2024 Oct;59(10):1793-1801. doi: 10.1007/s00127-024-02660-y. Epub 2024 Apr 7.
This study aims to examine time trends in the ability to correctly identify schizophrenia and major depression within the German general population from 1990 to 2020, as an indicator of changing mental health literacy (MHL). Additionally, we investigated shifts in the use of stigmatizing language.
Our analysis is based on four waves of representative population surveys in Germany in 1990/1993 (West Germany: N = 2044, East Germany: N = 1563), 2001 (N = 5025), 2011 (N = 2455), and 2020 (N = 3042) using identical methodology. Respondents were presented with an unlabelled case vignette describing a person who exhibited symptoms of either schizophrenia or major depression. Participants were then asked to name the problem described in the vignette using an open-ended question.
From 1990/1993 to 2020, correct identification of schizophrenia increased from 18% to 34% and from 27% to 46% for major depression. However, derogatory labels remained constant throughout all survey waves, particularly for schizophrenia (19% in 1990/1993 and 18% in 2020). For depression, more trivializing and potentially devaluing statements were recorded.
Despite the increasing use of psychiatric terminology among the general population, the persistence of derogatory labels suggests that improved MHL, reflected in higher recognition rates, may not automatically translate into a reduction in stigmatizing language. With depression, a normalization and trivialization of a severe illness could pose new challenges to people with major depression. Dedicated efforts to combat the stigma of severe mental illness are still needed.
本研究旨在考察 1990 年至 2020 年德国普通人群正确识别精神分裂症和重度抑郁症的能力趋势,以此作为心理健康素养(MHL)变化的指标。此外,我们还调查了污名化语言使用的变化。
我们的分析基于德国四次具有代表性的人群调查,分别在 1990/1993 年(西德:N=2044,东德:N=1563)、2001 年(N=5025)、2011 年(N=2455)和 2020 年(N=3042)进行,使用相同的方法。受访者收到一份未标记的案例描述,描述了一个表现出精神分裂症或重度抑郁症症状的人。然后,参与者被要求使用开放式问题来命名案例描述中描述的问题。
从 1990/1993 年到 2020 年,正确识别精神分裂症的比例从 18%上升到 34%,重度抑郁症的比例从 27%上升到 46%。然而,污名化标签在所有调查中保持不变,尤其是对精神分裂症(19%在 1990/1993 年和 18%在 2020 年)。对于抑郁症,记录到更多轻视和潜在贬低的说法。
尽管普通人群中越来越多地使用精神病学术语,但污名化标签的持续存在表明,心理健康素养的提高,体现在更高的识别率上,可能不会自动转化为污名化语言的减少。对于重度抑郁症,这种严重疾病的正常化和轻视可能会给患者带来新的挑战。仍然需要努力消除严重精神疾病的污名。