| Literature DB >> 35125015 |
Sarah K McKenzie1, John L Oliffe2,3, Alice Black1, Sunny Collings4.
Abstract
The stigma of men's mental illness has been described as having wide-reaching and profound consequences beyond the condition[s] itself. Stigma negatively impacts men's mental health help-seeking and the use of services amid impeding disclosures, diminishing social connection and amplifying economic hardship. Although men often face barriers to discussing their struggles with, and help-seeking for mental illness challenges, research focused on men's lived experiences of mental illness stigma is, at best, emergent. This scoping review explores men's mental illness related stigmas synthesizing and discussing the findings drawn from 21 published qualitative articles over the last 10 years. Four thematic findings were derived: (a) the weight of societal stigma, (b) stigma in male-dominated environments, (c) inequity driven stigmas, and (d) de-stigmatizing strategies. Despite evidence that stigma is a common experience for men experiencing diverse mental illness challenges, the field remains underdeveloped. Based on the scoping review findings, research gaps and opportunities for advancing the field are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: masculinities; men; mental illness; qualitative; stigma
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35125015 PMCID: PMC8832600 DOI: 10.1177/15579883221074789
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Mens Health ISSN: 1557-9883
Figure 1.Pathway of Articles Identified and Excluded.
Summary of Included Articles.
| Author/year/ country | Primary objectives | Theoretical framework | Data collection methods | Study population | Relevant findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| To explore the barriers and facilitators of help-seeking for anxiety among adolescent males | None | Focus groups and individual interviews using vignettes | 29 adolescent males with/without clinical anxiety recruited from mental health services and the community (age 12–18) | Perceived stigma was a significant barrier to young males disclosing their anxiety to peers or seeking help from school counselors. Having a mental illness which required professional help was seen as weak, unmacho and resulted in fear of being bullied or excluded by peers. Help-seeking threatened their masculine social status and they would rather deny experiencing symptoms than leave themselves open to being stigmatized by others. | |
| To explore the stigma associated with mental illness for athletes and the difficulties they may face in seeking help for mental health problems | Link and Phelan’s stigma framework | Interviews with stimulus text | 8 male varsity football players (mean age 22) | Players described the stigma around mental illness as weakness, a lack of mental toughness and were fearful of being associated with mental illness. Negative labels and stereotypes were commonly used for those with mental illness. Players were also fearful of being rejected by their peers if they disclosed mental health difficulties. The use of famous sportsmen in campaigns to de-stigmatize mental illness in a masculine-dominated sport was reported as a positive strategy. | |
| To understand men’s experiences of using ambulance services for mental health and/or alcohol and other drug problems | None | Semi-structured interviews | 30 men who used ambulance service for mental health and /or alcohol and other drug concerns (including anxiety, depression, self-harm, suicidal ideation/attempt, anxiety, intoxication, overdose, and psychosis) (mean age 40) | Men described negative experiences of care from ambulance staff including shame, embarrassment, a lack of professionalism and compassion and judgmental communication that their mental health crisis was not as legitimate a reason for ambulance care as physical health concerns. | |
| To explore the drivers of suicidality from the perspectives of gay, bisexual, and Two-Spirit (indigenous) men (GBTSM) | Intersectionality framework | Semi-structured photo-elicitation interviews | 21 GBTSM with a history of suicidal thoughts, plans and/or attempts (age 23-71) | Participants described how multiple intersecting forms of stigma and oppression related to their sexual identity, class, ethnicity, having a mental illness, homophobia and biphobia were drivers of their suicidality. Men described feeling disconnected, socially isolated, and excluded. | |
| To explore suicide prevention from the perspectives of gay, bisexual, and Two-Spirit men (GBTSM) | None | Semi-structured photo-elicitation interviews | 21 GBTSM with a history of suicidal thoughts, plans and/or attempts and 8 who had lost a GBTSM friend, partner or family member to suicide (age 23-71) | Participants described the double stigma of being GBTSM and having a mental illness, but also the enduring effects that homophobia, biphobia and mental illness stigma had on their everyday lives. Suicide and mental illness continued to be seen as taboo subjects which reinforced stigma. Peer support from those with similar experiences helped in addressing stigma. | |
| To explore how stigma shapes gay men’s bereavement after the loss of a partner to suicide | Link and Phelan’s stigma framework | Descriptive case study approach using semi-structured photo-elicitation interviews | Two gay men who lost a partner to suicide (age 40-49) | Gay men described a number of stigma-related challenges during and after the loss of their partner to suicide: thwarted efforts to connect their partners to professional help, maintaining silences and secrets about partners due to mental illness, HIV and sexual minority stigma; complicated grieving process, and loss of support during their own bereavement journeys. | |
| To explore factors which enable men to seek help for their mental health | None | Semi-structured in-depth interviews | 9 men who were currently or had received counseling in the past 12 months (age 23-65) | Men described how help-seeking was supported or enabled by a number of factors: challenging their own understandings and perceived stigma of mental illness through interactions with mental health professionals, disclosing within social groups where help-seeking was normalized and less likely to be stigmatized, seeing sportsmen’s disclose mental health issues. | |
| To explore the experience of depression in men with physical disabilities | None | Focus groups and interviews | 24 men with physical disabilities (e.g., spinal cord injury, multiple sclerosis, traumatic brain injury) and depression (age > 18) | Men experienced stigma and social marginalization as a result of having a visible physical disability, a mental illness and being unable to meet traditional gendered expectations of men as breadwinners, successful in paid work, strong and muscular. Depression was described as ‘another weakness and failing’ in addition to physical disability and not disclosed in order to avoid further stigma. | |
| To explore men’s discourses of help-seeking for depression | Connell’s theory of masculinities | Semi-structured interviews | 38 men with depression (formally diagnosed or self-reported) (age 24-50) | Men described fear of being judged for seeking help for their depression. To avoid the additional potential stigma of seeking help from professionals, men reframed their help-seeking behavior in a number of ways: manly reliance, as responsible independent action, guarded vulnerability, desperation and genuine connection. These different discourses enabled men to circumvent or buffer the stigma attached to treatment seeking and maintain their masculine identities. | |
| To explore the mental health treatment experiences of immigrant men living with co-occurring disorders | None | Semi-structured interviews | 10 immigrant men (from Middle East, South Asia, East and West Africa) diagnosed with co-occurring substance use and mental disorders (age 25-53) | Men experienced stigma from within their own immigrant communities due to the cultural stigma around seeking psychiatric help. This deterred them from engaging in mental health care. Those who did seek help experienced discrimination within the health system because of their status as an immigrant which led to them dropping out of treatment | |
| To explore working-class men’s constructions of help-seeking when feeling depressed or sad | Connell’s theory of masculinities | Semi-structured interview | 12 men working in manual/industrial labor (age 21-70) | For many men, the fear of being rejected, shamed, shunned or stigmatized by work colleagues led men to deny or hide mental illness symptoms. To avoid being stigmatized or seen as being weak for having mental health difficulties, men avoided disclosure and help-seeking. Men did not want to be seen to fail the masculine ideal of being strong, stoic and self-reliant which meant “toughing things out” when suffering. | |
| To explore suicide from the perspectives of older men who experience depression | Connell’s theory of masculinities | Semi-structured interview | 22 men who self-identify or have been formally diagnosed with depression (age 55-79) | The stigma associated with suicide was a significant barrier to men’s self-harming or acting on their suicidal thoughts. Underpinning this was the desire to protect family and friends from the shame and stigma that would likely accompany their suicide. Some men reported thoughts of how they might take their own life without attracting the stigma that accompanies it. | |
| To understand the connections between masculinities and men’s experiences of suicidality | Connell’s theory of masculinities | Semi-structured photo-elicitation interviews | 20 men with a history of suicidality (age 20-62) | Men self-isolated and distanced themselves as a protection strategy- a way of hiding their vulnerability and avoiding public stigma- and to avoid troubling others. This not only took men away from potential sources of social support but also left them at heightened risk of suicide | |
| To explore how social isolation is experienced among men with a history of suicidality | Connell’s theory of masculinities | Semi-structured photo-elicitation interviews | 35 men with a history of suicidality (age 20-68) | Men’s self-isolation was driven by the stigma of mental illness and/or being part of a minority sexual group, estrangement from families, a lack of belonging at work and a sense of being judged and ex-communicated by others for their life choices. Men’s accounts of mental illness revealed their internalization of stigma and a focus on their failure to meet societies gendered expectations of men to be productive and capable male citizens. | |
| To examine the beliefs and attitudes of African American male adolescents toward mental health issues and mental health service utilization | None | In-depth interviews | 54 African American adolescent males currently or formerly receiving mental health treatment following release from juvenile detention (age 15-17) | Participants described stigma, shame, fear and mistrust of the service providers they interacted with. To avoid further potential stigma, many disengaged from mental health services. Communities were less tolerant of those with mental illness and there was shame and stigma in being an African American man with a mental health issue. Young men experienced shame and ridicule amongst their peers for their involvement with mental health services. | |
| To explore men’s discourses of depression | None | In-depth interviews | 10 men with previous experience of high levels of depressive symptoms (age 45-88) | Participants described the embarrassment of being a man with depression as a barrier to disclosure of depression and seeking help. Men rejected this public stigma by (i) reframing their depression as “normal” rather than men who were facing a crisis and (ii) reframing their help-seeking as a rational and desirable masculine practice | |
| To explore the experiences of men with eating disorders in the workplace | None | In-depth interviews | 14 men who self-identify or have been formally diagnosed with an eating disorder (mean age= 27.8) | Men reported fear of potential stigmatization, shame and backlash for revealing their eating disorder (ED) to colleagues in the workplace, especially in male dominated workplaces. To avoid stigma, many men chose not to disclose their ED and to blend into the culture of the organization. This included avoiding social events, finding ways to manage the ED and in extreme cases, leaving their job meaning they were unable to receive workplace benefits. The stigma of EDs was seen as more stigmatizing and shameful for men given Eds are typically viewed as a feminine disorder. | |
| To explore men’s experiences and attitudes toward depression, help-seeking, and service use | None | Semi-structured interviews | 12 men diagnosed or self-identified as having depression (age 16-64) | Men described feeling stigmatized and, in some cases, shunned by work colleagues for not being unable to cope with mental distress, and for failing to meet the norms relating to paid work. Men’s depression-related incapacity to work and being labeled left them feeling further stigmatized. In terms of help-seeking, some avoided accessing treatment out of fear of being further stigmatized, while others found safe spaces among men-only groups where they could disclose their condition without the shame or stigma of being labeled as ‘unmanly’. | |
| To explore the experiences of black men with schizophrenia who disengage from mental health services | None | In-depth interviews | 7 men with a diagnosis of schizophrenia and a history of disengagement from mental health services (age 31–64) | Men had a complex relationship with mental health services of which the social stigma of being involved in services contributed to. Not only did men feel that their association with services had a negative impact on their social identity, but it also impacted their relationships with their families, community and wider society. | |
| To examine African American men’s beliefs about mental illness, stigma, and barriers to help-seeking | Psychological Common-Sense Model | In-depth interviews | 17 men who self-identify as African American with and without personal experience of mental illness | Most men were aware of the stigma and negative stereotypes associated with having a mental illness, but did not endorse these ideas, nor did they consider stigma to be a barrier to help-seeking. Rather mental illness was perceived as a ‘normal’, ‘everyday’ occurrence, synonymous with physical illness. | |
| To understand the mental health experiences and help-seeking of male professional footballers | None | In-depth interviews | 7 male professional footballers with self-reported experience of mental health difficulties and help seeking (age 32-41) | Men avoided stigma by concealing their mental health difficulties and putting on a ‘brave face’. They described the fear of rejection if they disclosed to their peers due to the competitive, macho culture associated with being in the male-dominated world of football. The perceived lack of safe spaces to share their difficulties contributed to feelings of helplessness, isolation and sense of being trapped. Internalization of this stigma and shame was a barrier to seeking help, and men relied on female partners and mothers for support where the risk of rejection was lower. |