Inequities Gone or Enduring? Evaluating the Effects of a School-Based Antistigma Intervention on Race/Ethnic and Gender Intersectional Disparities in Mental Illness Stigma.

IF 2.7 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL Stigma and Health Pub Date : 2023-08-01 Epub Date: 2022-08-29 DOI:10.1037/sah0000406
Melissa J DuPont-Reyes, Alice P Villatoro, Jared Datzman, Jo C Phelan, Kris Painter, Kay Barkin, Bruce G Link
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Abstract

While significant mental illness stigma disparities across race/ethnicity and gender exist, little is known about the efficacy of anti-stigma interventions in reducing these intersectional disparities. We examine the two-year effects of school-based anti-stigma interventions on race/ethnic and gender intersectional stigma disparities among adolescents. An ethnically and socioeconomically diverse sixth grade sample (N = 302) self-completed surveys assessing stigma before randomly receiving an anti-stigma curriculum and/or contact intervention versus no intervention. Surveys were also self-completed two-years post-intervention. Stigma measures assessed general mental illness knowledge/attitudes, awareness/action, and social distance. Stigma towards peers with specific mental illnesses were examined using vignettes-two adolescent characters were described as having bipolar (Julia) and social anxiety (David) disorder. Race/ethnicity and gender were cross-classified into six intersectional groups (Latina/o, Non-Latina/o Black, and Non-Latina/o White girls and boys). Linear regressions adjusting for poverty and mental illness familiarity examined anti-stigma intervention effects across intersectional groups in sixth and eighth grade. The school-based anti-stigma intervention reduced intersectional stigma disparities over the two-year study period. While Non-Latino Black boys and Latino boys/girls reported greater disparities in stigma at baseline compared to Non-Latina White girls, these disparities (14 total) were predominantly eliminated in the two-year follow-up following receipt of the curriculum and contact components to just one remaining disparity post-intervention among Non-Latino Black boys. By identifying differences in how school-based anti-stigma interventions reduce mental illness stigma for unique race/ethnic and gender intersectional groups, we can better understand how to shape future anti-stigma interventions for diverse intersectional populations.

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不平等消失还是持续?评估校内反污名化干预措施对精神疾病污名化中种族/民族和性别交叉差异的影响。
虽然不同种族/族裔和性别之间存在着严重的心理疾病污名化差异,但人们对反污名化干预措施在减少这些交叉差异方面的效果却知之甚少。我们研究了校内反污名化干预措施对青少年种族/族裔和性别交叉污名化差异的两年影响。一个种族和社会经济多样化的六年级样本(N = 302)在随机接受反污名化课程和/或接触干预与不接受干预之前,自我完成了评估污名化的调查。干预两年后也自行完成了调查。成见测量评估了一般精神疾病知识/态度、意识/行动和社会距离。对患有特殊精神疾病的同龄人的成见则通过小故事进行了研究--两个青少年角色分别被描述为患有躁郁症(朱莉娅)和社交焦虑症(戴维)。种族/民族和性别被交叉划分为六个交叉群体(拉丁裔/黑人、非拉丁裔/黑人和非拉丁裔/白人男孩和女孩)。根据贫困程度和对精神疾病的熟悉程度进行线性回归,考察了六年级和八年级各交叉群体的反污名化干预效果。在为期两年的研究期间,校本反污名化干预减少了跨群体污名化差异。与非拉丁裔白人女孩相比,非拉丁裔黑人男孩和拉丁裔男孩/女孩在基线时报告的成见差异更大,但在接受课程和接触内容后的两年跟踪中,这些差异(共 14 个)已基本消除,非拉丁裔黑人男孩在干预后只剩下一个差异。通过确定校内反污名化干预措施如何减少特定种族/民族和性别交叉群体对精神疾病的污名化,我们可以更好地了解如何为不同的交叉群体制定未来的反污名化干预措施。
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Stigma and Health
Stigma and Health Multiple-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
6.70%
发文量
94
期刊最新文献
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