Parsing stigma's relationship with the psychosocial functioning of youth identified as at clinical high risk for psychosis: evaluating whether symptom stigma or labelling stigma is stronger

分析污名与被认定为精神病高危青少年的心理社会功能之间的关系:评估症状污名和标签污名哪个更强

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The clinical high risk for psychosis (CHR-p) syndrome enables early identification of individuals at risk of schizophrenia and related disorders. We differentiate between the stigma associated with the at-risk identification itself ('labelling-related' stigma) versus stigma attributed to experiencing mental health symptoms ('symptom-related' stigma) and examine their relationships with key psychosocial variables. AIMS: We compare labelling- and symptom-related stigma in rates of endorsement and associations with self-esteem, social support loss and quality of life. METHOD: We assessed stigma domains of shame-related emotions, secrecy and experienced discrimination for both types of stigma. Individuals at CHR-p were recruited across three sites (N = 150); primary analyses included those who endorsed awareness of psychosis risk (n = 113). Paired-sample t-tests examined differences in labelling- versus symptom-related stigma; regressions examined associations with psychosocial variables, controlling for covariates, including CHR-p symptoms. RESULTS: Respondents reported greater symptom-related shame, but more labelling-related secrecy. Of the nine significant associations between stigma and psychosocial variables, eight were attributable to symptom-related stigma, even after adjusting for CHR-p symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Stigma attributed to symptoms had a stronger negative association with psychosocial variables than did labelling-related stigma among individuals recently identified as CHR-p. That secrecy related to the CHR-p designation was greater than its symptom-related counterpart suggests that labelling-related stigma may still be problematic for some CHR-p participants. To optimise this pivotal early intervention effort, interventions should address the holistic 'stigmatising experience' of having symptoms, namely any harmful reactions received as well as participants' socially influenced concerns about what their experiences mean, in addition to the symptoms themselves.

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