Psychiatry, stigma, and resistance
- 10 October 1998
- Vol. 317 (7164) , 963-964
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.317.7164.963
Abstract
The Royal College of psychiatrists has just launched a five year campaign aiming to reduce the stigmatisation experienced by people with mental health problems and to close the gap between professional and public assessment of treatment. The campaign is targeted primarily at the general public, whose attitudes differ significantly from those of health professionals. 1 2 The main problem that the campaign seeks to address is the resistance of sufferers to seeking or accepting advice and treatment. It is based on the assumption that this resistance is linked to public attitudes towards treatment of mental problems and the stigma experienced by sufferers. The campaign literature cites a study by Jorm et al, which shows that the public more often perceives psychiatric medication as harmful than helpful.2 There are several possible explanations for this. For the general public such questions may well …Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Helpfulness of interventions for mental disorders: Beliefs of health professionals compared with the general publicThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1997
- Lay people's attitudes to treatment of depression: results of opinion poll for Defeat Depression Campaign just before its launchBMJ, 1996
- Patients' ideas about medicines: a qualitative study in a general practice population.1994