Data for: When Do Psychosocial Explanations of Psychiatric Problems Increase Stigma? Self-Report and Implicit Evidence

Published: 1 February 2019| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/cts6wwhhbc.1
Contributors:
Ryan Thibodeau, Gabrielle Amberger

Description

Background and Objectives: Biomedical explanations of psychiatric problems, compared to psychosocial explanations, may amplify psychiatric stigma. One limitation of existing research is the measurement of almost exclusively self-reported stigma. This study evaluated the stigma-related effects of biomedical versus psychosocial explanations of schizophrenia using conventional self-report and two other measurement approaches that may tap more deeply held attitudes. Methods: One hundred three undergraduates listened to a vignette describing a man with (1) schizophrenia of biomedical origin, (2) schizophrenia of psychosocial origin, or (3) diabetes. They then completed an Implicit Association Test, conventional self-report stigma measures, and projected other measures that captured perceptions of most other people’s likely impressions. Results: Participants were more likely to attribute stigmatizing views to others compared to themselves. The projected other measurement, but not the conventional self-report measurement, predicted implicit attitudes. We obtained no evidence that the psychosocial causal explanation of schizophrenia led to decreased stigma compared to the biomedical causal explanation. In fact, the psychosocial causal explanation increased stereotyped attitudes. Limitations: The absence of a schizophrenia control group complicates interpretation of biomedical versus psychosocial group comparisons. Conclusions: Psychosocial causal explanations that portray people as subject to numerous, severe stressors may evoke the cultural stereotype of the “ticking time bomb” from whom others seek safe distance.

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Psychiatry, Clinical Psychology

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