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Stigma doesn’t discriminate: physical and mental health and stigma in Canadian military personnel and Canadian civilians

机译:污名没有歧视:加拿大军事人员和加拿大平民的身心健康和污名

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Background Illness-related stigma has been identified as an important public health concern. Past research suggests there is a disproportionate risk of mental-health stigma in the military, but this same finding has not yet been established for physical-health stigma. The current study aimed to assess the independent contribution of mental and physical health on both enacted stigma (discriminatory behaviour) and felt stigma (feelings of embarrassment) and to determine whether these associations were stronger for military personnel than civilians. Methods Data were obtained from the 2002 Canadian Community Health Survey - Mental Health and Well-being and its corresponding Canadian Forces Supplement. Logistic regressions were used to examine a potential interaction between population (military [ N =?1900] versus civilian [ N =?2960]), mental health, and physical health in predicting both enacted and felt stigma, with adjustments made for socio-demographic information, mental health characteristics, and disability. Results Mental health did not predict enacted or felt stigma as a main effect nor in an interaction. There was a strong link between physical health and enacted and felt stigma, where worse physical health was associated with an increased likelihood of experiencing both facets of stigma. The link between physical health and enacted stigma was significantly stronger for military personnel than for civilians. Conclusions Physical health stigma appears to be present for both civilians and military personnel, but more so for military personnel. Elements of military culture (e.g., the way care is sought, culture of toughness, strict fitness requirements) as well as the physical demands of the job could be potential predictors of group differences.
机译:背景与疾病有关的污名已被认为是重要的公共卫生问题。过去的研究表明,军队中存在心理健康污名的风险不成比例,但是对于身体健康污名尚未发现相同的发现。当前的研究旨在评估心理和身体健康对既定的污名(歧视性行为)和感觉的污名(尴尬感)的独立贡献,并确定这些联系对于军事人员是否比平民更强。方法数据来自2002年加拿大社区健康调查-心理健康与福祉及其相应的加拿大部队补编。使用Logistic回归分析人口(军事[N =?1900]与平民[N =?2960]),心理健康和身体健康之间的潜在相互作用,以预测已成年的和被污名的污名,并对社会人口统计学进行调整信息,心理健康特征和残疾。结果心理健康并未预测成见或感觉到的污名是主要影响,也不是交互作用。身体健康与已制定和感到的污名之间有着密切的联系,其中,身体健康较差与遭受污名两方面的可能性增加有关。军事人员的身体健康与已制定的污名之间的联系比平民要牢固得多。结论平民和军事人员都存在身体健康的污名,而军事人员则更是如此。军事文化的要素(例如,寻求护理的方式,韧性的文化,严格的体适能要求)以及工作的体力需求可能是群体差异的潜在预测因素。

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