TY - JOUR
T1 - Measuring the stigma of psychiatry and psychiatrists
T2 - development of a questionnaire
AU - Gaebel, Wolfgang
AU - Zäske, Harald
AU - Cleveland, Helen-Rose
AU - Zielasek, Jürgen
AU - Stuart, Heather
AU - Arboleda-Florez, Julio
AU - Akiyama, Tsuyoshi
AU - Gureje, Oye
AU - Jorge, Miguel R
AU - Kastrup, Marianne
AU - Suzuki, Yuriko
AU - Tasman, Allan
AU - Sartorius, Norman
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - The stigma of mental illness is a severe burden for people suffering from mental illness both in private and public life, also affecting their relatives, their close social network, and the mental health care system in terms of disciplines, providers, and institutions. Interventions against the stigma of mental illness employ complementary strategies (e.g., protest, education, and contact) and address different target groups (e.g., school children and teachers, journalists, stakeholders). Within this framework, the World Psychiatric Association has adopted an Action Plan with the goal to improve the image of psychiatry and to reduce potential stigmatizing attitudes toward psychiatry and psychiatrists. To evaluate such interventions, a questionnaire has been developed that assesses opinions and attitudes toward psychiatrists and psychiatry in different samples of medical specialists (psychiatrists and general practitioners). The questionnaire comprises scales about perceived stigma in terms of the perception of societal stereotypes, self-stigma in terms of stereotype agreement, perceived stigma in terms of structural discriminations, discrimination experiences, stigma outcomes, and attitudes toward a second medical discipline. It is available in several languages (Arab, English, German, Japanese, Polish, and Spanish) and can easily be adapted for utilization in other medical specialties.
AB - The stigma of mental illness is a severe burden for people suffering from mental illness both in private and public life, also affecting their relatives, their close social network, and the mental health care system in terms of disciplines, providers, and institutions. Interventions against the stigma of mental illness employ complementary strategies (e.g., protest, education, and contact) and address different target groups (e.g., school children and teachers, journalists, stakeholders). Within this framework, the World Psychiatric Association has adopted an Action Plan with the goal to improve the image of psychiatry and to reduce potential stigmatizing attitudes toward psychiatry and psychiatrists. To evaluate such interventions, a questionnaire has been developed that assesses opinions and attitudes toward psychiatrists and psychiatry in different samples of medical specialists (psychiatrists and general practitioners). The questionnaire comprises scales about perceived stigma in terms of the perception of societal stereotypes, self-stigma in terms of stereotype agreement, perceived stigma in terms of structural discriminations, discrimination experiences, stigma outcomes, and attitudes toward a second medical discipline. It is available in several languages (Arab, English, German, Japanese, Polish, and Spanish) and can easily be adapted for utilization in other medical specialties.
KW - Attitude of Health Personnel
KW - Career Choice
KW - Humans
KW - Physicians
KW - Psychiatry
KW - Questionnaires
KW - Societies, Medical
KW - Stereotyping
U2 - 10.1007/s00406-011-0252-0
DO - 10.1007/s00406-011-0252-0
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 21947511
SN - 0940-1334
VL - 261 Suppl 2
SP - S119-23
JO - European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience
JF - European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience
ER -