100% tevredenheidsgarantie Direct beschikbaar na betaling Zowel online als in PDF Je zit nergens aan vast
logo-home
Summary 4.2 Personality Disorders week 3 €6,49   In winkelwagen

Samenvatting

Summary 4.2 Personality Disorders week 3

 15 keer bekeken  0 keer verkocht

4.2 PDs week 3 literature

Voorbeeld 4 van de 37  pagina's

  • 28 november 2022
  • 37
  • 2022/2023
  • Samenvatting
Alle documenten voor dit vak (11)
avatar-seller
ebru1365
WEEK 3 LITERATURE

LECTURE 5

o To identify and distinguish the different types of stigma, incl.:
o Characteristics
o Prevalence rate
o Origin/how these stigmas come about
o Differences between PDs
o Unique position of adolescents
o To identify good vs. poor anti-stigma interventions
o To identify potential (neg) effects of stigma
o To apply knowledge of stigma in PD to clinical examples


Sheehan 2016 – the stigma of personality disorders

defining stigma
- stigma: social rejection resulting from negatively perceived characteristics
o this rejection leads to spoiled identity of the stigmatized person
- 4 qualities of stigma:
o individual differences are recognized
o these differences are perceived by society as negative
o the stigmatized group is seen as the outgroup
o end result is loss of opportunity, power or status
- social-cognitive perspective:
o stigma includes stereotypes (cognitive), prejudice (affective), and
discrimination (behavioral)




- public stigma manifests in many forms, from lack of eye contact to complete
ostracization
- public stigma becomes internalized into self-stigma if the person believes the
negative societal attitudes are true
- self-stigma might lead to low self-esteem, depression, lack of motivation
- structural stigma occurs when stigmatizing beliefs and attitudes lead to unfair social
institutions and policies for stigmatized group

,stigma of mental illness
- stereotypes and prejudices cause discriminatory treatment
- incompetence, dangerousness and irresponsibility are the most commonly endorsed
stereotypes
o media reports exaggerate violence, fueling people with mental illness to live
in poor neighborhoods, avoidance and withdrawal
o people with mental illnesses are blamed for their illnesses
- attitude toward mental illness has not improved over time
- “why try” effect: recovery efforts stall when the person believes stigmatized
mentality of incompetence
- those who fail to seek treatment are seen as “crazy”

public stigma of PDs
- PDs might be more stigmatized than other diagnoses
- fear and frustration among common public with PDs
- symptoms are viewed as manipulations or rejections of help
o can cause people to be seen as difficult and misbehaving rather than sick
- general public has less knowledge about PDs than other illnesses
- only 2.3% recognize BPD symptoms, whereas 72.5% recognized depression and
65.6% recognizes schizophrenia
- mental health literacy is connected to treatment seeking behavior and stigma
- people with PDs are ostracized rather than being referred and less likely to recognize
their own symptoms

BPD
- most stigmatized of all PDs
- people with BPD are seen as annoying and undeserving
- frequent contact with law due to anger and suicidality, leading police to feel
frustrated, angry
- officers might get more frustrated if they think people with PDs are intentionally
troublesome
- when people with BPD are seen as deliberately wasting police time, they could
experience harsher treatments and services

Antisocial PD
- self-fulfilling prophecy where child believes s/he is a bad person and engages in a
future of crime life
- stigma of dangerousness can lead to denied treatment and recovery especially within
the justice system
- often referred as psychopaths or sociopaths and stigmatized as evil
- seen as more violent but sane and responsible for their actions
- most court officials don’t consider ASPD as a mental illness
- being labeled with ASPD might affect sentencing and possibility for death penalty
- bc of these attitudes people with ASPD are not able to complete rehabilitation while
in prison system
- recent evidence: ASPD is associated with brain abnormalities  which may lead the
justice system to re-evaluate

,OCPD
- due to similarity to OCD, OCPD is a well-understood PD by general public
- the public sees people with OCPD quite open to treatment
- public understanding: OCPD is taught to be caused by childhood experience,
parenting styles, stress/anxiety, and can be treated with CBT
- more favorable, less stigma

Narcissistic PD
- not familiar to the general public
- no research examines stigma for this but a recent survey found that people with NPD
are seen as fragile, lacking self-esteem and experiencing problematic social
relationships
- NPD is also seen as a potential advantage in business contexts
- lack of understanding suggests potential stigma, more research needed

provider stigma
- negative attitudes and behaviors of health care professionals toward people with
PDs, especially BPD
- one study: psychiatric nurses have the most stigmatizing attitudes
- diff study: psychiatrists have the lowest empathy toward people with BPD in
comparison to other professionals
- negative provider attitudes
o can lead to differential treatment
o can reduce the amount of services available
o reduce quality of services
o discourage people from seeking and continuing treatment
o for BPD, may even cause exclusion from treatment
o lead to poor decisions to hospitalize and assign negative traits
- perceived discrimination is common when they seek hospital admission in times of
crisis
- suicide attempts are seen as attention-seeking rather than sign of illness
- BPD patients are discharged quicker from the ER than others

self-stigma
- can lead to problems with self-esteem, depression and identity
- self-stigma in BPD  bc of shame they may avoid diagnosis and treatment to avoid
self-labeling as sick, weak and incapable
- BPD patients have more existential shame than others

structural stigma
- impact availability of services, quality of services, insurance coverage, research of PD
- although PDs are more prevalent, there is less funding, research and services
- diagnostic and screening tools are absent or not sufficient
- bc of overlap between BPD and bipolar or PTSD; people get misdiagnosed
- psychiatrists may avoid diagnosis of PD to protect people from the systemic stigma

, anti-stigma interventions for PDs
- education: correcting misperceptions
- interactive presentation of stories of recovery
- meta-analysis: interventions with education and meaningful interpersonal contact
are most effective
- contact with health provides is trickier: health professionals who have more
experience with BPD more negative or positive views  mixed results
- designs that combat diagnostic-specific stigma: e.g. 2-days of BPD anti-stigma
training
o positive results, positive attitudes, improved relationships, lower desire for
social distance and 6-month maintenance
- recent brain imaging shows differences in PD brains and challenge the belief that PDs
are character flaws or intentional
o but criticism: this might increase the notions of differentness and downplays
the possibility for change or recovery
o this prevention shows change in knowledge and attitude but not empathy
o instead: combining neurobiological info about causes with recovery-oriented
info  more effective

gaps in the literature
- explore stigma differences for diff PDs or between clusters
- explore how stigma manifests within the context of diff services
- PD stigma interacting with co-occurring stigma conditions  explore impact of
multiple stigmas

CATHOOR 2015 – ADOLESCENTS WITH PDS SUFFER FROM SEVERE PSYCHIATRIC STIGMA

general mental disorders and stigma
- lack of stigma research on adolescents and kids
- stigma research focused on minors show that public stigma is condition-specific
- labeling antisocial behavior in youth as delinquent leads to poorer diagnoses
- minors with ADHD or depression are thought to be more dangerous than others
- adolescents receive the most-stigmatizing reaction of all age groups
- associative stigma: form of social disapproval bc of its direct connection with the
stigmatized person, associative stigma is bidirectional
o parents are directly blamed for the mental disturbance of their children, and
children are seen as a part of mentally disturbed family
- adolescents hesitate to apply diagnostic labels to themselves
o desire not to distinguish themselves from normality
o self-labeling in ado. is demoralizing, stigmatizing, disempowering
o ado. assess their problems only when they experience then for longer times
- ado. with depression rate their own depression stigma lower than other’s depression
stigma
o ado. who were briefly hospitalized for psy reasons show low levels of stigma
apprehension
- evidence that receiving a label of a mental illness is stigmatizing, but can also be
beneficial for treatment

Voordelen van het kopen van samenvattingen bij Stuvia op een rij:

Verzekerd van kwaliteit door reviews

Verzekerd van kwaliteit door reviews

Stuvia-klanten hebben meer dan 700.000 samenvattingen beoordeeld. Zo weet je zeker dat je de beste documenten koopt!

Snel en makkelijk kopen

Snel en makkelijk kopen

Je betaalt supersnel en eenmalig met iDeal, creditcard of Stuvia-tegoed voor de samenvatting. Zonder lidmaatschap.

Focus op de essentie

Focus op de essentie

Samenvattingen worden geschreven voor en door anderen. Daarom zijn de samenvattingen altijd betrouwbaar en actueel. Zo kom je snel tot de kern!

Veelgestelde vragen

Wat krijg ik als ik dit document koop?

Je krijgt een PDF, die direct beschikbaar is na je aankoop. Het gekochte document is altijd, overal en oneindig toegankelijk via je profiel.

Tevredenheidsgarantie: hoe werkt dat?

Onze tevredenheidsgarantie zorgt ervoor dat je altijd een studiedocument vindt dat goed bij je past. Je vult een formulier in en onze klantenservice regelt de rest.

Van wie koop ik deze samenvatting?

Stuvia is een marktplaats, je koop dit document dus niet van ons, maar van verkoper ebru1365. Stuvia faciliteert de betaling aan de verkoper.

Zit ik meteen vast aan een abonnement?

Nee, je koopt alleen deze samenvatting voor €6,49. Je zit daarna nergens aan vast.

Is Stuvia te vertrouwen?

4,6 sterren op Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

Afgelopen 30 dagen zijn er 71184 samenvattingen verkocht

Opgericht in 2010, al 14 jaar dé plek om samenvattingen te kopen

Start met verkopen
€6,49
  • (0)
  Kopen