不如人:对海洛因使用者的非人化

IF 1 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Health Education Pub Date : 2021-09-06 DOI:10.1108/he-07-2021-0099
H. Sumnall, A. Atkinson, S. Gage, Ian Hamilton, C. Montgomery
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引用次数: 7

摘要

目的减少污名是一项重要的公共卫生挑战,因为某些形式的药物使用会导致大量的发病率和死亡率。极端的污名化可能会导致目标群体的非人化,他们被认为具有较低的人性。作者研究了是否存在对使用海洛因的人的公然和微妙的非人化,以及这些是否与对非歧视性毒品政策的支持程度有关。设计/方法/方法使用英国便利样本(n=307[75.2%女性,平均年龄28.6±12.2岁])进行了一项横断面在线研究。参与者完成了对公然(人类进步[AoH]量表)和微妙(情绪归因任务)非人化的评估,以及评估对非歧视性药物政策支持的定制措施。其他措施控制了对吸毒者的污名化(PWUD)和道德厌恶。调查结果与普通人群和其他可能被污名化的参考群体(包括使用大麻的人)相比,使用海洛因的人受到了更大的公然非人化。作者还发现了微妙的非人化的证据,使用海洛因的人被认为不太可能感受到独特的人类情绪,不太可能感觉到积极情绪,更可能感觉到消极情绪。公然的非人化与支持非歧视性药物政策的概率显著降低有关。社会影响去人性化可能会对减少污名化举措以及促进公众对毒品政策和治疗的支持提出重大挑战。否认这一群体的人性可能被用来为歧视性政策或在资助决策中相对剥夺支持服务的优先地位辩护。寻求“重新人性化”PWUD的活动,包括社会包容,以及鼓励富有同情心的媒体报道物质使用的生活经历,可能是未来工作的有用领域。独创性/价值这是第一项调查海洛因使用者公然和微妙的非人化行为的研究,以及这与公众对毒品政策的支持之间的关系。
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Less than human: dehumanisation of people who use heroin
PurposeStigma reduction is an important public health challenge because of the large morbidity and mortality associated with some forms of substance use. Extreme stigma can lead to dehumanisation of target groups, who are ascribed with lesser humanity. The authors examined whether there was blatant and subtle dehumanisation of people who use heroin, and if these were associated with levels of support for non-discriminatory drug policy.Design/methodology/approachA cross-sectional online study using a UK convenience sample (n = 307 [75.2% female, mean age 28.6 ± 12.2 years]) was conducted. Participants completed assessments of blatant (Ascent of Humans [AoH] scale) and subtle (an emotion attribution task) dehumanisation and a bespoke measure assessing support for non-discriminatory drug policies. Other measures controlled for stigma towards people who use drugs (PWUD) and moral disgust.FindingsThere was greater blatant dehumanisation of people who used heroin compared to the general population and other potentially stigmatised reference groups, including people who use cannabis. The authors also found evidence of subtle dehumanisation, and people who used heroin were rated as being less likely to feel uniquely human emotions, less likely to feel positive emotions and more likely to feel negative emotions. Blatant dehumanisation was associated with significantly lower probability of support for non-discriminatory drug policy.Social implicationsDehumanisation may present significant challenges for stigma reduction initiatives and in fostering public support for drug policy and treatment. Denial of the humanity of this group could be used to justify discriminatory policies or relative deprioritisation of support services in funding decisions. Activities that seek to “rehumanise” PWUD, including social inclusion, and encouraging compassionate media representations that portray the lived experiences of substance use may be useful areas of future work.Originality/valueThis is the first study to investigate blatant and subtle dehumanisation of people who use heroin, and how this relates to public support for drug policy.
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来源期刊
Health Education
Health Education PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
期刊介绍: The range of topics covered is necessarily extremely wide. Recent examples include: ■Sex and sexuality ■Mental health ■Occupational health education ■Health communication ■The arts and health ■Personal change ■Healthy eating ■User involvement ■Drug and tobacco education ■Ethical issues in health education ■Developing the evidence base
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