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How does stigma affect work in people with serious mental illnesses? | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how both public and self-stigma affect employment among individuals with serious mental illness, revealing that public stigma influences lifetime work history while self-stigma impacts current work status.
  • Researchers found that the perception of dangerousness associated with mental illness had a significant correlation with lifetime work.
  • The study suggests interventions targeting both public and self-stigma could help improve employment opportunities for those experiencing mental health challenges.

Article Abstract

Objectives: How does stigma influence whether people with serious mental illness work? We examine the relationship of public stigma (the effects that occur when people with mental illness endorse the common prejudice of mental illness) and self-stigma (the results of people with psychiatric disorders internalizing prejudice) on current and lifetime histories of work.

Methods: Eighty-five persons with serious mental illness reported current work history (i.e., in the past 3 months and in the past year) and lifetime work history (i.e., "have you ever worked?"). They also completed measures of self- and public stigma, focusing on the stereotypes of responsibility and dangerousness.

Results: Endorsement of public stigma was shown to be significantly associated with lifetime history of work and self-stigma with current history. The dangerousness cluster of public stigma was specifically associated with lifetime work. We also tested a hierarchical model of self-stigma: that people need to first be aware of the prejudice, then agree to it, next apply it to themselves, and finally experience some harm to self-esteem. Only the latter stages of self-stigma-apply and harm-were correlated with current work.

Conclusions And Implications For Practice: Implications of these findings for meaningfully impacting stigma change are considered. In particular, we discuss ways to change public and self-stigma in order to enhance work.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/h0094497DOI Listing

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