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People with mental illness stigmatize mental illness less: A comparison study between a hospital-based sample of people with mental illness and a non-clinical general population sample in urban India. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Stigma negatively impacts the quality of life for individuals with severe mental illness, but those with lived experiences of mental illness generally have lower stigma compared to the general population.
  • A study conducted in New Delhi involving 647 individuals with severe mental illnesses matched with 649 non-psychiatric individuals found that the cases reported significantly lower stigma scores.
  • The findings suggest that individuals with lived experience may be more accepting of mental illness, highlighting the importance of including them in campaigns aimed at reducing stigma.

Article Abstract

Evidence shows that stigma negatively influences the quality of life of persons with severe mental illness. Nonetheless, stigma towards mental illness is lower among persons with a lived experience of mental illness compared to the rest of the population. Understanding the association between stigma of mental illness and the mental status of individuals living in urban India and whether this association is moderated by demographic factors opens a new avenue for prevention of social exclusion. Persons diagnosed with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or severe unipolar depression (cases, n  =  647) were recruited from among hospital patients in New Delhi between November 2011 and June 2012 and matched with non-psychiatric urban dwellers by age, sex, and location of residence (controls, n  =  649). Propensity score matching with multivariable linear regression was used to test whether stigma towards mental illness, measured by a 13-item Stigma Questionnaire, differed between cases and controls. Cases reported significantly lower stigma scores than controls (b  =  -0.50, p < 0.0001). The strength of the association between mental illness and stigma was not affected after controlling for age, caste, sex, education, and employment status, while wealth marginally reduced the strength of the association. These findings suggest individuals with a lived experience of mental illness, in New Delhi, India, may be more tolerant towards mental illness and support the need to involve persons with lived experience in the development and implementation of health promotional campaigns and programs aimed at reducing stigma towards mental illness.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13634615231179265DOI Listing

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