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Do people with mental illness deserve what they get? Links between meritocratic worldviews and implicit versus explicit stigma.

机译:患有精神疾病的人应该得到什么吗?精英世界观与隐性和显性污名之间的联系。

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Meritocratic worldviews that stress personal responsibility, such as the Protestant ethic or general beliefs in a just world, are typically associated with stigmatizing attitudes and could explain the persistence of mental illness stigma. Beliefs in a just world for oneself ("I get what I deserve"), however, are often related to personal well-being and can be a coping resource for stigmatized individuals. Despite these findings in other stigmatized groups, the link between worldviews and the stigma of psychiatric disorders is unknown. We measured just world beliefs for self and others as well as endorsement of the Protestant ethic in 85 people with schizophrenia, schizoaffective or affective disorders and 50 members of the general public. Stigmatizing attitudes toward people with mental illness (perceived responsibility, perceived dangerousness, general agreement with negative stereotypes) were assessed by self-report. Using a response-latency task, the Brief Implicit Association Test, we also examined guilt-related implicit negative stereotypes about mental illness. We found a consistent positive link between endorsing the Protestant ethic and stigmatizing self-reported attitudes in both groups. Implicit guilt-related stereotypes were positively associated with the Protestant ethic only among members of the public. Among people with mental illness, stronger just world beliefs for self were related to reduced self-stigma, but also to more implicit blame of persons with mental illness. The Protestant ethic may increase (self-)stigmatizing attitudes; just world beliefs for oneself, on the other hand, may lead to unexpected implicit self-blame in stigmatized individuals. Public anti-stigma campaigns and initiatives to reduce self-stigma among people with mental illness should take worldviews into account.
机译:强调个人责任的精英主义世界观,例如新教徒的道德观念或对正义世界的普遍信仰,通常与污名化的态度联系在一起,并可以解释精神疾病污名的持续存在。为自己建立一个公正世界的信念(“我得到了我应得到的”)通常与个人福祉相关,并且可以成为受污名的个人的应对资源。尽管在其他被污名化的群体中发现了这些发现,但世界观与精神疾病的污名之间的联系仍是未知的。我们仅测量了世界对自我和他人的信仰,以及对85位精神分裂症,精神分裂症或情感障碍患者和50位公众的基督教信仰的认可。通过自我报告评估了对精神疾病患者的耻辱态度(感知的责任,感知的危险,对负面刻板印象的普遍认同)。使用应对潜伏期任务,即简短内隐联想测验,我们还研究了与内相关的关于精神疾病的内隐负面刻板印象。我们发现,在支持新教徒的道德规范和对两组人自我表扬的态度之间存在着一贯的积极联系。与内相关的刻板印象只与公众中的新教徒道德正相关。在患有精神疾病的人中,更强的正义世界信念与减少自我耻辱感有关,但也与精神病患者的更多隐性责任有关。新教徒的道德可能会增加(自我)污名化的态度;另一方面,公正的世界信念可能导致被污名化的个人意想不到的内在自责。公众反耻辱运动和减少精神病患者自我耻辱的举措应考虑世界观。

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