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Stigmatization of schizophrenia as perceived by nurses, medical doctors, medical students and patients

Accessible summary

  • • 
    Genetic explanation of schizophrenia was frequently associated with stigmatizing attitudes.
  • • 
    Medical students and doctors expressed higher levels of perceived stigmatization than other groups of subsects.
  • • 
    Participants perception of other people stigmatizing attitudes was associated with genetic explanation of schizophrenia.

Abstract

Stigmatization of schizophrenia is widespread and its genetic explanation may potentially increase the stigma. The present study investigated whether seeing schizophrenia as a genetic or environmental disorder might influence perceived beliefs towards people with schizophrenia and whether social stigmatizing attitudes were differently perceived the 202 subjects who were recruited. Perceived social stigmatizing attitudes were compared among participants who read two vignettes depicting a person with schizophrenia. Then, the Standardized Stigmatization Questionnaire (SSQ) was administered. A genetic explanation of schizophrenia was more frequently associated with stigmatizing attitudes. Also, there were higher levels of perceived stigmatization in medical students and medical doctors than in other groups based on their social experience or background. However, the sample size was small and this was a non-experimental design; also the SSQ would benefit from more cross-validation. About half of the participants perceived stigmatizing social attitudes. Finally, considering schizophrenia as a genetic disorder influenced participants perception of other people’s beliefs about dangerousness and unpredictability and people’s desire for social distance.

Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 02/20/2011 | Link to this post on IFP |
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