Department of Psychological Sciences, Rice University.
Owen Graduate School of Management, Vanderbilt University.
Am Psychol. 2024 Nov;79(8):1155-1170. doi: 10.1037/amp0001330.
Members of stigmatized groups face severe, chronic adversities that produce qualitatively unique and often challenging experiences. Further, access to resources relevant to overcoming adversity (e.g., time, money, energy, support) is depleted and blocked by stigmatization. However, current approaches to resilience and posttraumatic growth do not account for stigma, hindering our understanding of both constructs. Thus, drawing from the conservation of resources theory (Hobfoll, 1989), we develop a stigma-conscious framework on resilience and posttraumatic change (PTC) that extends existing work by enhancing realism and generalizability for stigmatized groups. We present a multilevel framework that explains how and why stigmatization directly (as an input) and indirectly (as an influencer of resource-related mechanisms) shapes resilience and PTC processes and outcomes. This framework advances interpretations of past work on resilience and posttraumatic growth, their respective conceptualizations and operationalizations, future model development, and interventions. We encourage and guide scholars to integrate stigma into resilience and PTC research and applications. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
被污名化群体的成员面临严重、长期的逆境,这些逆境会产生独特且常常具有挑战性的经历。此外,获得克服逆境的相关资源(例如时间、金钱、精力和支持)会因污名化而被耗尽和受阻。然而,目前关于韧性和创伤后成长的方法并没有考虑到污名化,这阻碍了我们对这两个概念的理解。因此,我们借鉴资源保护理论(Hobfoll,1989),为韧性和创伤后变化(PTC)开发了一个有意识污名的框架,通过增强现实性和可推广性来扩展现有工作,以适应污名化群体。我们提出了一个多层次的框架,解释了污名化如何以及为什么直接(作为输入)和间接(作为资源相关机制的影响因素)塑造韧性和 PTC 过程和结果。该框架推进了对韧性和创伤后成长的过去工作的解释,以及它们各自的概念化和操作化、未来模型开发和干预措施。我们鼓励和引导学者将污名化纳入韧性和 PTC 研究和应用中。