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JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
Stigma apprehension among adolescents discharged from brief psychiatric hospitalization.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 2011 October
This study explores stigma apprehension (fear of being devalued or rejected) and its correlates among 102 adolescents, interviewed within 7 days of discharge from their first psychiatric hospitalization. Components of the Model of Stigma-Induced Identity Threat by Major and O'Brien (Annu Rev Psychol 56:393-421, 2005) comprise the study model, including collective stigma representations and group and domain identification; additional clinical, personal, and contextual characteristics such as social affiliation, interpersonal support, self-identification as having a mental disorder, and perceived need for others' approval were added to the model. We found that, on average, the participants reported "a little" stigma apprehension, and 21% reported substantial stigma apprehension. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that higher stigma apprehension was most associated with the female sex, younger age at initiation of mental health treatment, lower self-esteem, greater need for others' approval, more experiences with personal stigmatization, and not identifying or affiliating with peers who have mental health or behavior challenges. These factors collectively accounted for 46% of the variance. The study's findings particularly highlight the role of social context and external contingencies of self-worth in determining adolescents' perceptions of stigma-related threat.
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