10 research outputs found

    Interventions targeting mental health self-stigma: A review and comparison

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    OBJECTIVE: With growing awareness of the impact of mental illness self-stigma, interest has arisen in the development of interventions to combat it. The present article briefly reviews and compares interventions targeting self-stigma to clarify the similarities and important differences between the interventions. METHOD: We conducted a narrative review of published literature on interventions targeting self-stigma. RESULTS: Six intervention approaches (Healthy Self-Concept, Self-Stigma Reduction Program, Ending Self-Stigma, Narrative Enhancement and Cognitive Therapy, Coming Out Proud, and Anti-Stigma Photo-Voice Intervention) were identified and are discussed, and data is reviewed on format, group-leader backgrounds, languages, number of sessions, primary mechanisms of action, and the current state of data on their efficacy. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: We conclude with a discussion of common elements and important distinctions between the interventions and a consideration of which interventions might be best suited to particular populations or settings

    Support for the social-cognitive model of internalized stigma in serious mental illness

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    One prominent social-cognitive model of internalized stigma by Corrigan and his colleagues (2012; 2002) proposes that individuals are exposed to societal stereotypes about mental illness, at least tacitly agree with them, and may apply them to oneself, engendering harmful self-beliefs. There is limited empirical support for this model in serious mental illness. Moreover, it is not clearly established how internalized stigma and its associated factors impact recovery in this population. The current study uses structural equation modeling (SEM) to assess the social-cognitive model's goodness of fit in a sample of Veterans with serious mental illness (Veteran sample, n = 248), and then validates the model in a second and independent sample of individuals receiving community-based psychiatric rehabilitation services (community sample, n = 267). Participants completed the Self-Stigma of Mental Illness Scale (SSMIS; Corrigan et al., 2006) and measures of self-esteem, self-efficacy, and recovery attitudes. Consistent with Corrigan and colleagues' formulation of internalized stigma, SEM analyses showed a significant indirect pathway from stereotype awareness, to stereotype agreement, to application to self, to self-esteem decrement, to poorer recovery attitudes. Additionally, there was a significant direct effect from stereotype awareness to self-esteem. This study shows that individuals with serious mental illness experience psychological harm from stigma in two ways: (1) through perceived public prejudice and bias, and (2) through internalizing these negative messages. In particular, stigma harms individuals' self-esteem, which then reduces their recovery attitudes

    Trauma exposure and PTSD in women with schizophrenia and coexisting substance use disorders: Comparisons to women with severe depression and substance use disorders

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    The present study compared rates of trauma exposure and PTSD among three groups of women at high trauma risk: those with substance use disorders (SUD) and schizophrenia (n=42), those with SUD and severe, nonpsychotic depression (n=38), and those with SUD and no other DSM-IV Axis I condition (n=37). We hypothesized that exposure to traumatic stressors and current diagnosis of PTSD would be more common in women with schizophrenia and SUD, when compared to the other two groups. Results indicate that women with schizophrenia and SUD had a more extensive trauma history than women with SUD only, and were also more likely to have PTSD. Women with schizophrenia had a fourfold greater likelihood of meeting criteria for current PTSD than were women with severe, nonpsychotic depression when potential confounds of age, race, education, severity of trauma history, and childhood trauma exposure were controlled. These results lend support to the possibility that women with psychosis have an elevated vulnerability to PTSD symptomology when exposed to life stressors that is distinct from the vulnerability associated with coexisting nonpsychotic SMI. The psychological sequelae of trauma are substantial and should be addressed in women seeking treatment for schizophrenia and problematic substance use
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