Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

The stigma of mental illness is getting worse

#1
Magical Realist Offline
One senses the stigma against mental illness even among victims of it. The habit of laughing at themselves as looney and crazy. The tendency to hide it from others, at work for instance, where it would immediately reflect on their reliability as a good employee. But mental illness is nothing to laugh at. It IS an illness, and it has real affects on our lives. We must come to accept mental illness AS a condition no less than we do diabetes, or MS, or cancer. And there is no shame in taking medications for it if that is what it takes to enable you to live your life better. You do not need to define yourself by your mental illness--by a label that will only get you stereotyped and discriminated against. But acknowledging you have it is a crucial stage on your personal journey. You are not weak, or lazy, or irresponsible, or selfish because of it. You carry a burden you never asked for, and you need help in living with it.
==========================================================================
"Stigma against the mentally ill is bad, and research suggests it is getting worse, says Patrick Corrigan, PsyD, professor of psychology at the Illinois Institute of Technology and director of the Chicago Consortium for Stigma Research. "Mental illness is still extremely stigmatized," he says, "thanks in part to television shows that portray this population as dangerous, in need of supervision, and/or wild and irresponsible. That is the public perception, despite evidence that they are no more dangerous than anyone else."

Stigma against the mentally ill comes from two other sources. There is self-stigma, in which a person assumes a "why try" attitude about life goals and tasks.

Research suggests that 40% to 75% of people never seek out medication and therapy.

Even more insidious is label avoidance, which often leads people to avoid treatment because they don't want to be grouped with the mentally ill.

No flowers, no cards, no calls

When Max Dine's wife had an operation, she got 50 get-well cards. When the retired oncologist from Phoenix was cycling through the agony of bipolar disorder, no one wrote or called him. "You lose friends because they don't know what's going on or don't want to associate with someone who's dealing with depression," he says. "With mental illness, a lot of the time they think you're faking it."

Sometimes families and friends can subtly pressure people into avoiding treatment as well. "In my family, depression is just something you are not supposed to talk about," says Keris Myrick, 46, of Pasadena, Calif. "If I had bouts of extreme sadness, as a teen, my dad would ask, 'Why are you crying?' I'd say, 'I don't know, I just am,' and he'd say, 'Well you don't have anything to cry about, back in the day ... blah blah,' and 'your ancestors came from slavery' and on and on. I was expected to perform well in school, there was a lot of pressure to succeed. I might've been more free to speak about it earlier if I hadn't felt the pressure to be Superwoman."

Stigma against people with mental problems is baked into the health-care system, says John C. Norcross, PhD, professor of psychology at the University of Scranton, in Pennsylvania. For the mentally ill, access to psychological care and payment issues are an ongoing struggle. "There's no parity with regular health insurance," he says, "and insurance companies permit so few visits per year [to a mental health provider]." He calls this disparate treatment "gross discrimination."

Should you "come out" as mentally ill?

Though he is a mental health advocate, Corrigan encourages the mentally ill to carefully consider whether they want to "come out" to others. Once you are out it is hard to get back in, so you should test the waters. "You might say to somebody, 'Hey, did you see ER? Sally Field came out as bipolar. What did you think of that?' If they say, 'That's just political correctness, I hate those people,' then that is someone you should not tell."

Jennisse Peatick, 36, says she lives a "happy, joyful" life with her husband, three dogs, and three cats in Hillsborough, N.J. Yet she feels self-stigma every day. "I think people assume being depressed makes me weak, even though I am very strong. Who knows where I got that. I don't think anyone has ever mistreated me because I am depressed."===http://www.health.com/health/package/0,,...83,00.html
#2
Yazata Offline
There's mental illness and "mental illness".

I'm inclined to think of things such as schizophrenia, bi-polar disorder, clinical depression and real autism (perhaps not every 'autism spectrum disorder') as real illnesses, whether physical problems with the nervous system or something more along the lines of software problems.

But I'm inclined to think that pop-psychology has extended the clinical model into so much of everyday life that it's probably overused. Dissatisfaction and being thought 'odd' aren't necessarily pathologies that require the attentions of a clinician.

Another related problem arises in the kind of rhetoric one finds in the opinion media, where it's often used as an excuse for individuals preying on other people in especially egregious ways.

When I was young, in the 1960's and 70's, de-stigmatizing psychiatric illness was a big cause. Back in those days the public generally feared 'crazy' people, but the idea that people with serious psychiatric illness were dangerous to others was itself stigmatized as 'prejudice' and 'ignorance'.

But today, whenever a particularly horrible crime occurs, apologists always insist that the perpetrator must have been suffering from psychiatric illness, which is thought to 'explain' or even to have 'caused' the crime. There's a growing reluctance to condemn other people as 'bad' or 'evil', so they must have been 'sick'. Rather than deserving punishment, they need 'help' and 'treatment'.

So the pendulum seems to be swinging back towards the once unpopular and discredited idea that the mentally ill really are threats, potentially dangerous to those around them.


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Article Owning a pet does not reduce symptoms of severe mental illness, study shows C C 4 172 Jul 20, 2023 12:01 AM
Last Post: confused2
  The new meth and mental illness among the homeless Magical Realist 1 81 Feb 17, 2023 01:09 AM
Last Post: C C
  Livers can stay alive and functional for over 100 years + Why are we getting fatter? C C 0 86 Oct 19, 2022 12:12 AM
Last Post: C C
  Fear of getting lost while driving Magical Realist 2 160 Jul 15, 2022 01:54 AM
Last Post: RainbowUnicorn
  Genetic study confirms sarin nerve gas as cause of Gulf War illness C C 2 114 May 17, 2022 07:24 AM
Last Post: Kornee
  Microwave weapons may be behind Havana Syndrome: the mystery illness of US officials C C 1 134 Dec 9, 2020 12:55 AM
Last Post: C C
  More porn use by men, worse erectile function + Say goodbye to menstruation? C C 2 165 Jul 19, 2020 11:32 AM
Last Post: Zinjanthropos
  Do antidepressants create more mental illness than they cure? (interview) C C 1 169 Jun 15, 2020 05:39 PM
Last Post: Syne
  Is covid 19 no worse than the flu? Hardly! Magical Realist 1 269 Apr 30, 2020 04:02 PM
Last Post: Secular Sanity
  How childhood infections & antibiotics may increase mental illness risk C C 0 318 Feb 23, 2019 02:03 AM
Last Post: C C



Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)