Antistigma campaigns have been promoting a medical view of schizophrenia. Given the growing body of research finding negative associations between biogenetic (BG) causal attributions and stigmatizing attitudes, this approach must be reappraised. The present study investigates the impact of different psychoeducational interventions on the etiology of schizophrenia (BG and psychosocial [PS], vs a neutral condition) and on stigmatizing attitudes in medical (n = 60) and psychology students (n = 61). Information was presented via information brochures and a video presentation. Attitudes were assessed before and after the interventions on an explicit level using the stereotype questionnaire and the Social Distance Scale as well as on an implicit level, using the Implicit Association Test. Both educational interventions produced a significant decrease in several stereotype components, which was not the case in the neutral condition. The BG intervention decreased the attribution of blame in both groups. It also decreased the stereotype unpredictability/incompetence and social distance in the medical students but increased the negative outlook on prognosis in the psychology students. The PS intervention reduced the widespread stereotype of dangerousness as well as social distance in the group of medical students. While further research into antistigma interventions is necessary, the proposal for antistigma campaigns is to take a multidimensional and balanced approach, which is adapted to target groups and provides additional facts that challenge the myths maintaining stigma.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbm131 | DOI Listing |
Med Hist
January 2025
Independent Scholar.
Historical research on efforts to reduce the stigma associated with venereal disease (VD) generally dates these campaigns back to the 1930s. Within the United States, one of the earliest attempts to detach VD from its traditional association with sexual immorality occurred during the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century, when the New York City dermatologist Lucius Bulkley coined the term ('syphilis of the innocent') in the hopes of demonstrating that many of those who contracted this disease did so through non-sexual contact. Gaining widespread acceptance within the medical community, Bulkley's ideas served as the intellectual foundation for a discursive assault on the prevailing belief that syphilis constituted the 'wages of sin'-one designed to destigmatise the disease and to promote more scientific responses to it.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Serv
November 2024
Veterans Affairs Central and Western Massachusetts Healthcare System.
Two thirds of military personnel diagnosed with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) do not engage in treatment. We examined the degree that prejudicial beliefs about people with PTSD negatively affected psychiatric medication acceptance. Public stigma is best defined as negative stereotypes regarding individuals being judged as inferior or weak for having PTSD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
October 2024
Department of Psychiatry, College of Medicine, Mustansiriyah University, Baghdad, IRQ.
Background Long-term forms of depression, especially chronic and episodic, make it very hard for any individual to maintain a steady job or develop in his/her workplace, which reduces the ability to gain financial security. The purpose of this study is to investigate and thoroughly examine the impact of long-term depression on career trajectories and job stability using a methodical evaluation of the literature supplemented with case studies. Methodology This study combined a systematic review of available literature with a detailed case series analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Res Arch
July 2024
lrsay Institute, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN.
Background: Literacy campaigns stand as the most common approach to raising awareness of mental health problems, increasing the use of services, and reducing stigma. However, research suggests that more informed public beliefs may have little effect or even trigger the stigma backlash. We aim to provide a wider, cross-national examination of how stigma varies globally and to examine whether the ability to recognize a mental health problem and see it as "a disease like any other" is the optimal roadmap for stigma reduction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Public Health
September 2024
Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Wroclaw University of Science and Technology, Wrocław, Poland.
Background: Due to the need to increase social awareness about dementia and the needs of patients living with dementia in Poland, the (eng. ) campaign was created. The aim of the study was to evaluate its effectiveness.
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