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Reducing Stigma toward the Mentally Ill:

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Title: Reducing Stigma toward the Mentally Ill:


1
Reducing Stigma toward the Mentally Ill
  • The Impact of Exposure versus Information
  • Stephanie Turner
  • Hanover College

2
Stigma
  • Goffman (1963) defines stigma as an attribute of
    an individual that makes him different from
    othersand of a less desirable kind-in the
    extreme, a person who is quite thoroughly bad, or
    dangerous, or weak.

3
Definitions
  • Stigma more specific, negative form of
    attitudes directed toward specific group
  • Exposure any association or connection with
    mentally ill which involves seeing them as full
    human beings, capable of humor, warmth,
    intelligence, etc. and deserving of empathy
  • Empathy vicarious emotional experience of
    others (Mehrabian, 1972)

4
Tested Interventions to Reduce Stigma
  • Angermeyer (1996) and Dietrich (2006) discuss how
    close contact with the mentally ill impacts and
    shapes attitudes
  • Addison and Thorpe (2004)
  • Found that factual knowledge alone did not
    positively alter attitudes
  • Used Community Attitudes Toward the Mentally Ill
    Scale (CAMI)

5
Pre- / Post-Intervention Design
  • Demographics
  • 2 surveys pre-intervention
  • Empathy scale, CAMI
  • Participant sees one of two videos
  • Information Professional Lecture
  • Exposure Robert Documentary
  • Post-intervention surveys
  • Empathy scale, CAMI

6
Hypotheses
  • Hypothesis 1 Participants in the Exposure
    Condition (Robert Documentary) will show a
    decrease in stigmatizing attitudes compared to
    participants in the Information Condition
    (Professional Lecture).
  • Hypothesis 2 Participants in the Exposure
    Condition will show an increase in empathy as
    compared to the participants in the Information
    Condition.

7
Participants
  • Students (N 25)
  • n 22 female n 3 male
  • Wide range of previous experience with mental
    illness, including acquaintance, friend, family
    member, and self
  • Majority (76) reported some previous experience
    or contact with mentally ill persons

8
Materials CAMI
  • Community Attitudes Toward the Mentally Ill
    (CAMI)
  • (Taylor Dear, 1981)
  • Four dimensions of attitudes 5 point Likert
    Scale
  • Benevolence
  • We need to adopt a far more tolerant attitude
    toward the mentally ill in our society
  • Authoritarianism
  • The best way to handle the mentally ill is to
    keep them behind locked doors
  • Social Restrictiveness
  • The mentally ill should not be given any
    responsibility
  • Community Mental Health Ideology
  • The best therapy for many mental patients is to
    be a part of a normal community

9
Materials Revised Empathy Scale
  • Based on the Emotional Empathetic Tendency Scale
    (EET) (Mehrabian, 1971)
  • Specified empathy toward mentally ill people
  • 16 items total
  • 5 point Likert Scale
  • 8 concepts- 2 question each

10
Empathy Scale Sample Questions
  • Concept Sympathy for the mentally ill
  • Negative People make too much of the feelings
    and sensitivity of the mentally ill.
  • Positive The mentally ill deserve our sympathy.

11
Materials Professional Lecture
  • Video created for this study
  • Licensed Clinical Psychologist and director of a
    college counseling center
  • Discusses three mental disorders Schizophrenia,
    Bipolar disorder, and Schizoaffective disorder
  • Formal lecture style, no empathic or humanizing
    information present

12
Materials Robert Documentary
  • Imagining Robert My Brother, Madness, and
    Survival (Hott, 2004)
  • Film by two brothers
  • Robert, who has suffered with mental illness
  • Jay, primary caretaker over the last 38 years
  • Shows how family copes with mental illness
  • Realistic, humanizing portrayal of Robert

13
Results CAMI
  • Mixed Model ANOVA
  • CAMI- significant interaction (p 0.005)
  • Follow up analysis for simple main effects of
    time also significant (p lt 0.05)
  • Benevolence subscale- significant interaction (p
    lt 0.05)
  • Follow up analysis for simple main effects of
    time also significant (p lt 0.05)
  • Other subscales showed no significant differences

14
Pre-/Post- CAMI Changes
CAMI Score
Significant interaction (p 0.005)
15
Pre-/Post- Benevolence Changes
Significant interaction (p lt 0.05)
Benevolence Score
16
Discussion of CAMI
  • Hypothesis 1 confirmed Participants showed more
    benevolent, and thus less stigmatizing attitudes
    after Exposure intervention
  • CAMI and Benevolence differences might be even
    greater with a neutral or more stigmatizing
    sample.

17
Results Empathy Scale
  • Reliability was achieved Empathy Scale revised
    to specify the Mentally Ill was found to be
    reliable (a 0.71)
  • Hypothesis 2 not supported No significant main
    effects or interaction found

18
Previous Contact of Participants
19
Empathy Discussion
  • Participants displayed high levels of empathy
    pre-intervention.
  • Mean 61.4
  • Range 49-70
  • High empathy levels may have restricted the
    amount of change that could be evoked by
    intervention.

20
Implications and Future Research
  • Target sample low in empathy and high in
    stigmatizing attitudes toward mentally ill
  • Further research is needed to
  • Test intervention with more participants
  • Explore the role benevolence plays in reducing
    stigmatizing attitudes and how it is related to
    empathy

21
Pre-/Post- Empathy Changes
Empathy Score
No significant Interaction p 0.737
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