| Literature DB >> 19823756 |
Jennifer E Boyd1, Emerald P Katz, Bruce G Link, Jo C Phelan.
Abstract
The stigma of mental illness has been shown to be affected by personal contact with mental illness and by a belief in the genetic heritability of mental illness. We use data from a nationally representative survey to test whether the relationship of stigma with contact remains after taking into account the effects of genetic beliefs and other background characteristics. Contact was defined as a history of psychiatric hospitalization among respondents themselves, their family members, or their friends. Respondents answered questions about a vignette character with a mental illness. We found that respondents with contact felt less anger and blame toward the character, thought that the character had a more serious problem, and would want less social distance from the character, including both casual and intimate aspects of social distance. Respondents with contact were not significantly different from the general population in the degree to which they expressed sympathy, thought the problem would last a lifetime, or wanted to restrict reproduction. Thus, contact is associated with having a less ostracizing, critical attitude toward a stranger with mental illness. The results underscore the importance of this experienced group as a resource in fighting stigma in society. Since many people who have had a psychiatric hospitalization have not told their friends or family members about it, this lower-stigma group could be enlarged.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19823756 PMCID: PMC2956056 DOI: 10.1007/s00127-009-0147-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol ISSN: 0933-7954 Impact factor: 4.328
Sample and vignette characteristics used as covariates, in weighted analysis sample (N = 911)
| % or Mean (SD) | |
|---|---|
| Female | 63.7 |
| Age | 48.3 (16.7) |
| Highest education level completed | |
| Eighth grade or less | 3.3 |
| Some high school | 7.2 |
| High school graduate (or GED) | 29.4 |
| Trade or technical school | 2.9 |
| Some college (or associate’s degree) | 23.8 |
| College graduate | 21.9 |
| Postgraduate work/advanced degree | 11.5 |
| Household income in 2001 | |
| Under $20,000 | 19.3 |
| $20,000 up to $40,000 | 25.8 |
| $40,000 up to $60,000 | 21.9 |
| $60,000 up to $80,000 | 13.2 |
| $80,000 or more | 19.9 |
| African-American | 13.6 |
| Asian-American | 3.1 |
| Hispanic | 9.9 |
| Other non-White race/ethnicity | 2.5 |
| Political conservatism | |
| Very liberal | 7.2 |
| Somewhat liberal | 16.8 |
| Moderate | 31.3 |
| Somewhat conservative | 31.7 |
| Very conservative | 13.0 |
| Eugenic concerns | 2.4 (0.79) |
| Belief in importance of genetic factors in mental illness | |
| Not important at all | 4.1 |
| Not very important | 10.8 |
| Somewhat important | 49.4 |
| Very important | 35.7 |
| Vignette type 2 | 25.2 |
| Vignette diagnosis schizophrenia | 51.1 |
| Genetic attribution | |
| Not genetic | 36.7 |
| Partly genetic | 29.7 |
| Strongly genetic | 33.6 |
N is the unweighted number of observations used in the analysis
Association of contact with aspects of stigma
| Dependent variable | Beta for mental illness experience | Standard error |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Blame | −0.12*** | 0.03 | 676 |
| Anger | −0.04* | 0.02 | 680 |
| Sympathy | 0.06 | 0.05 | 673 |
| Perceived persistence | 0.06 | 0.05 | 663 |
| Perceived seriousness | 0.08* | 0.04 | 676 |
| Social distance, total | −0.10** | 0.03 | 665 |
| Social distance, casual | −0.08** | 0.03 | 681 |
| Social distance, intimate | −0.12** | 0.04 | 655 |
| Reproductive restriction | −0.05 | 0.04 | 677 |
N is the unweighted number of observations used in the analysis. Educational attainment, family income, age, gender, ethnicity (dummy variables for African-American, Asian-American, Hispanic, and “other”), political conservatism, eugenic concerns, belief in the importance of genetic factors in mental illness, vignette type, vignette diagnosis, and genetic attribution are controlled. Differences in sample size are due to missing data on dependent variables
* p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.0001
Variation of blame, anger, perceived seriousness, and social distance according to contact with mental illness (mean, standard deviation, and N in the weighted sample)
| None hospitalized | Friend hospitalized | Family hospitalized | Self hospitalized | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) |
| Mean (SD) |
| Mean (SD) |
| Mean (SD) |
| |
| Blame | 1.51 (0.83) | 426 | 1.23 (0.54) | 374 | 1.17 (0.54) | 64 | 1.19 (0.58) | 16 |
| Anger | 1.25 (0.59) | 431 | 1.11 (0.39) | 378 | 1.09 (0.30) | 64 | 1.13 (0.34) | 16 |
| Perceived seriousness | 3.34 (0.69) | 427 | 3.45 (0.59) | 374 | 3.52 (0.67) | 62 | 3.26 (0.84) | 16 |
| Social distance, total | 2.25 (0.68) | 412 | 2.12 (0.72) | 362 | 2.09 (0.62) | 62 | 1.90 (0.60) | 16 |
| Social distance, casual | 1.85 (0.61) | 429 | 1.70 (0.64) | 379 | 1.69 (0.55) | 64 | 1.53 (0.51) | 16 |
| Social distance, intimate | 2.53 (0.86) | 404 | 2.40 (0.88) | 361 | 2.36 (0.80) | 62 | 2.14 (0.75) | 15 |
Ns vary across items due to missing values