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Confronting and changing the stigma of mental illness

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Title: Confronting and changing the stigma of mental illness


1
Confronting and changing the stigma of mental
illness
Who is Crazy?
  • Mental Health Planning Council
  • San Francisco, California
  • June 19, 2008
  • Sarah Altman, MD, MPH
  • Karen Hopp, MD

2
  • Sarah Altman, MD, MPH
  • Clinical Instructor, UCSF
  • Attending Inpatient Psychiatrist,
  • San Francisco General Hospital
  • Karen Hopp, MD
  • Private practice
  • Psychiatry primary care medicine
  • Woodland Healthcare, Woodland, CA

3
Objectives
  • Describe stigma and its effects on individuals,
    families communities
  • Understand selected models in anti-stigma
    research
  • Summarize what is known about effective
    strategies to reduce stigma and discrimination
  • Provide information about available resources

4
(No Transcript)
5
A Letter From A Resident
  • Dear Dr. Fink,
  • I am a PGY-4 resident in psychiatry. I am
    also mentally ill. I am bipolar and a recovering
    alcoholic. It has been difficult and trying at
    times. Sometimes I feel as though it is too much
    and I should reevaluate my goals..

6
What is STIGMA?
  • Word originally referred to the mark or brand
    that was put on Greek slaves to separate them
    from free men
  • A sign of disgrace or discredit which sets a
    person apart from others. Goffman, 1963

7
The Experience of Stigma
  • SHAME
  • Blame
  • Secrecy
  • The black sheep of the family role
  • Isolation
  • Social exclusion
  • Hopelessness

(Byrne, 2000)
8
Common themes The Concept of Stigma
  • STEREOTYPING ?
  • (The neutral PERCEPTIONS of difference)
  • PREJUDICE ?
  • (Negative BELIEFS about this difference)
  • DISCRIMINATION
  • (Negative ACTIONS taken)

Adapted from work by Corrigan et al and Link
and Phelan
9
People with Mental Illness are
  • Dangerous ? therefore they should be feared and
    excluded
  • Incompetent ? therefore they should be controlled
    and should not be allowed to make their own
    decisions
  • Lack willpower ? therefore they need to be cared
    for and should not be independent

(Corrigan, 2004), (Byrne, 2000)
10
The Discrimination of Stigma
  • Less likely to be hired
  • Less likely to have apartments rented to them
  • More likely to be rejected by friends and family
  • More likely to be falsely accused of a crime
  • More likely to be arrested and spend more time in
    jail that someone else similarly charged

(Rusch, 2005) (Read, 2006)
11
Public vs. Self Stigma
  • Public stigma consists of three elements ?
    stereotypes, prejudice, and discrimination, in
    the Context of POWER, that leads to negative
    treatment of the stigmatized group
  • Self stigma occurs when members of the
    stigmatized group internalize the public
    attitudes toward them, and leads to
    self-defeating beliefs and behaviors including
    avoiding treatment

(Corrigan, 2004)
12
  • They called me mad, and I called them mad, and
    damn them they outvoted me
  • Nathaniel Lee,
  • patient from England,
  • 16th century

13
Public vs. Self Stigma
  • Public stigma consists of three elements ?
    stereotypes, prejudice, and discrimination, in
    the Context of POWER, that leads to negative
    treatment of the stigmatized group
  • Self stigma occurs when members of the
    stigmatized group internalize the public
    attitudes toward them, and leads to
    self-defeating beliefs and behaviors including
    avoiding treatment

(Corrigan, 2004)
14
The Double Bind
  • People suffering from a mental illness have to
    deal both with the consequences of the illness
    and the STIGMA
  • The number one predictor of STIGMA is having the
    LABEL of mental illness, causing people to avoid
    treatment (and the label) as well as maintain
    secrecy in order to pass

(Rusch, 2005) (Link, 1987)
15
Stigma also affects
  • Families courtesy stigma leading to lack of
    disclosure and support
  • Mental Health Field within training programs
    and work settings, also seen in lower levels of
    funding for mental vs. physical health care
  • (Corrigan, 2005)

16
Why Stigma? Why Now?
  • Unfortunately, research suggests public stigma is
    getting worse over the last few decades.
  • A U.S. sample population in 1996 was 2.5 times
    more likely to endorse dangerousness stigma than
    a comparable population in 1950
  • This finding has been replicated on 4 other
    continents.

(Read, 2006)
17
A look at our own attitudes
  • Would you
  • Be willing to start work with a person with
    mental illness?
  • Like to live next door to a person with mental
    illness?
  • Make friends with a person with mental illness?
  • Rent a room to a person with mental illness?
  • Like your child to marry someone with a mental
    illness?
  • Trust a person with mental illness to take care
    of your child?

(Social Distance Scale, Link et al. 1987)
18
Definition of Social Distance
  • Social distance is the relative willingness of
    one person to participate in relationships of
    varying degrees of intimacy with a person who has
    a stigmatized identity (Bowman, 1987)
  • INCREASED Social Distance means LESS
    interpersonal involvement

19
A Community Sample(n844) (Lauber et al, 2004)
20
Research around Social Distance
  • Factors that increased social distance
  • Schizophrenia vs. depression diagnosis
  • Belief in the biomedical model of illness
  • Factors that decreased social distance
  • Positive attitude to lay helping and to
    community psychiatry
  • Contacts to persons with mental illness

(Lauber, 2004)
21
StigmaStrategies for Change
  • What does the literature tell us?
  • What can we do to change it?

22

The science of stigma is in its infancy.
  • The recognition of the enormous personal,
    social, and still unmeasured economic toll of
    stigma, and the absence of a conceptual framework
    or an evidence base for interventions, are
    driving a movement to reinvent a science of
    stigma.

Keusch, Wilentz and Kleinman, February 2006
23
Academic Psychiatry, 322, March-April 2008
Special IssueReaching Out to Families and
Overcoming Stigma
24
Challenges
  • Social distance ? actual behavior.
  • People know what they should say, but often act
    differently.
  • Measuring opinions doesnt give insight into why
    people have these opinions.

25
Interventions
  • Protest

Corrigan, River et al., 2001 Corrigan Gelb, B,
2006 Rusch et al., 2005
26
Interventions
  • Protest
  • Education

Corrigan, River et al., 2001 Corrigan Gelb,
B, 2006 Rusch et al., 2005
27
Interventions
  • Protest
  • Education
  • Contact

Corrigan, River et al., 2001 Corrigan Gelb, B,
2006 Rusch et al., 2005
28
Evidence for Interventions
  • Intervention trials
  • Real-world experience

29
Limitations of the research data
  • Uncontrolled trials
  • Very small controlled trials
  • Self-reported measures
  • Surrogate markers.

30
Intervention Trials
  • Small n 90, 100, 150, 200, 500, 1500
  • Short
  • intervention hours 1 or less, 2, 4, 8
  • one week-long full-time intervention

31
Pre-test post-test measurements
  • Knowledge about mental illness
  • Attitudes Attribution scales
  • Attitudes Social distance scales

32
School Children Police Officers Community
College Students(as surrogates for the general
public)
  • 6 Uncontrolled trials in England and USA
  • Pinfold V, et al., 2003 (England) - 3 trials
  • Watson A, et al., 2004 (USA)
  • Warner, 2005 (Colorado)
  • Spagnolo, Murphy, Librera, 2008 (New Jersey)
  • 1 Nonrandom controlled trial in Germany
  • Schulze B, et al., 2003
  • 2 Randomized controlled trials in USA
  • Corrigan, River, et al., 2001
  • Corrigan, Rowan, et al., 2002

33
Anti-stigma Intervention Studies
  • Protest ?
  • No measurable effect on attitudes

34
Anti-stigma Intervention TrialsResults
  • Protest ? no effect
  • Education ?
  • Positive effect on knowledge
  • Minimal effect on attitudes, perhaps greater in
    school children
  • Less effect on social distance
  • Longer interventions ? more effective

35
Boulder Police Officers Disappointing increase in
knowledge.
Warner, 2005 (Open the Doors)
36
English PoliceSmall Improvement in attitudes
Pinfold V, et al., 2003 (Open the Doors)
37
American middle schoolers Small improvement in
attitudes
Watson et al. 2004
38
Anti-stigma Intervention TrialsResults
  • Protest ? no effect
  • Education ? modest, limited effects
  • Contact ?
  • Greater impact on social distance than education
    alone.
  • Impact still very small.

39
Contact ?
  • Significant changes in some attitudes
  • The depressed patient was held less responsible
    for being depressed.
  • Depression can improve with treatment.
  • Psychosis can improve with treatment.
  • __________________________________
  • But not others
  • The psychotic patient was held no less
    responsible for having psychosis.

Corrigan, River, et al., 2001
40
Contact
  • New Jersey
  • n 426 adolescents
  • 1 hour informational session developed and
    facilitated by consumers of mental health
    services
  • significantly less stigmatizing attributions on 7
    of 9 factors

Spagnolo, Murphy, Librera, 2008
41
Protest Revisited
  • Grassroots efforts directed at the media
  • Reduce the presentation of negative images about
    mental illness in the media
  • Increase the presentation of positive images
    about mental illness in the media

42
  • Short-lived ABC sitcom
  • Only 5 episodes aired in 2006, though 13 were
    filmed.
  • By the third episode of the show multiple
    sponsors had withdrawn there support

43
(No Transcript)
44
Social Marketing
  • Changing Minds campaign United Kingdom
  • Royal College of Psychiatrists
  • Elimination of Barriers initiative USA
  • SAMHSA
  • Open the Doors Calgary, Canada
  • Like Minds, Like Mine New Zealand
  • New Zealand Ministry of Health

Crisp, et al., 2004 Akroyd Wylie,
2002 Sartorius Schulze, 2005 Vaughan Hansen,
2004
45
Like Minds, Like MineMass Media Component
  • Contact via media portrayal
  • Asked Are you prepared to judge?
  • TV spots ran 1 wk on/3 wks off for 8 mos
  • A Phase 2 strategy utilized more in-depth
    60-second mini-documentaries
  • Download from www.likeminds.govt.nz

Vaughan Hansen, 2004
46
New Zealand agreeingMental illness
adapted from Akroyd Wylie, 2002
47
New Zealand disagreeingPeople with mental
illness are
adapted from Akroyd Wylie, 2002
48
Social Distance Willingness to accept a person
who has had experience of mental illness as
adapted from Akroyd Wylie, 2002
49
Social Distance in schizophrenia Willingness to
accept someone as
adapted from Akroyd Wylie, 2002
50
Experience of persons with mental illness in New
Zealand
lot less stigma little less stigma little
more stigma lot more stigma
from Akroyd Wylie, 2003
51
  • "One of the biggest barriers to recovery is
    discrimination. That is why stopping
    discrimination and championing respect, rights
    and equality for people with mental illness is
    just as important as providing the best
    treatments and therapies.
  • Blueprint for Mental Health Services in New
    Zealand, November 1998

52
National Plan 2007 - 2013
Ministry of Health. 2007. Like Minds, Like Mine
National Plan 2007-2013 Programme to Counter
Stigma and Discrimination Associated with Mental
Illness. Wellington Ministry of Health.
53
Sponsors of U.S. Anti-Stigma Efforts
  • National Alliance on Mental Illness
  • SAMHSA
  • Address Discrimination Stigma (ADS) Center
  • Elimination of Barriers Initiative (EBI)
  • Active Minds on Campus
  • National Mental Health Awareness Campaign
  • Mental Health America
  • Chicago Consortium for Stigma Research
  • Open the Doors World Psychiatric Association

54
National Alliance on Mental Illness
  • Protest- Stigma Busters
  • Education- support groups Family to Family
  • Contact- In Our Own Voice

www.NAMI.org
55
SAMHSA
  • - highlights current anti-stigma programs
  • - fact sheets, survey data, how to tips

www.adscenter.org
56
Elimination of Barriers
  • - Public Education Program
  • - Launched in September 2003
  • - Pilot projects in 8 states
  • (California, Florida, Massachusetts, Texas,
  • No. Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin)

www.allmentalhealth.samhsa.gov
57
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration. Developing a Stigma Reduction
Initiative. SAMHSA Pub No. SMA-4176. Rockville,
MD Center for Mental Health Services, Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration,
2006.
58
National Mental Health Awareness Campaign
  • Launched in 1999
  • Youth Outreach
  • Mental Health Media Partnership
  • Roundtable Discussions

www.nostigma.org
59
Active Minds on Campus
  • Founded in 2001
  • Focus Mental Health needs of College Students

www.activemindsoncampus.org
60
Open the Doors
  • Project of the World Psychiatric Association
  • Begun 1996
  • Focus Reducing Stigma in Schizophrenia
  • 5 continents
  • 19 countries
  • www.openthedoors.com/english

61
Efforts in Stigma Research
  • -funded by NIMH
  • -principal investigator Patrick Corrigan, PsyD

www.stigmaresearch.org
62
Other Anti-Stigma Resources(Prepared by
National Stigma Clearinghouse)
  • Aleppos
  • Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation - Boston
    University
  • National Mental Health Information Center
  • Indiana Consortium for Mental Health Services
    Research
  • Institute for the Study of Human Resilience -
    Courtenay Harding
  • MacArthur Research Network on Mental Health and
    the Law
  • NIMH - National Institute of Mental Health
  • On Our Own of Maryland
  • Otto Wahl Writings, Research, Resource Lists
  • Pathways to Promise Ministry and Mental Illness
  • People Who
  • Stamp Out Stigma
  • Stigma of Cinemania Media Ethics (David
    Gonzalez)
  • Surgeon General's Reports. See 1999 Report on
    Mental Health, and others.

httpwww.stigmanet.org/
63
Targeted Groups for Change
  • Popular media journalists and executives
  • Employers
  • Landlords
  • Criminal justice officials law enforcement
  • Legislators regarding discriminatory laws
  • At risk populations
  • Consumers
  • Providers of health care
  • Mental Health Professionals

64
STIGMA
  • Takes an enormous personal, social, and still
    unmeasured economic toll.
  • Funding differential for mental health
  • Poor integration of consumer services

65
STIGMA Interventions
  • Protest, Education, Contact
  • Protest against the media
  • Face-to-face contact
  • Social marketing

66
STIGMA and DISCRIMINATIONEffective intervention
strategies
  • Specific interventions must be targeted
  • Consumer involvement a must
  • Requires a sustained effort
  • Over the long term multi-faceted effort
  • Much has already been done.
  • Resources are available.

67
Thank youGood luck
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