Mental Health Research Papers

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Mental health stigma refers to discriminating and prejudicial attitude and behavior towards mentally ill people (Crisp, 2000; Martin 2007). It is often associated with violence and undesriable social behaviors (Stuart, 2006). The negative depiction of individuals with mental illness in media being prevalent is one of the leading reasons of labelling mentally ill people (Scheffer, 2003).
Though growing efforts to combat stigma against mental illness continue (Sartorius & Schulze, 2005), many researchers claim that public perceptions of mental illness are in fact worsening (Abbey et al., 2011). Despite the numerous studies that have elucidated some characteristics common to a stigmatizing disposition (e.g., Silton, Flannelly, Milstein, & Vaaler, …show more content…

Researchers have found that individuals with high empathy levels showed better attitudes towards the intellectually disabled people (Cooney, Jahoda, Gumley, & Knott, 2006; Dovidio, Pagotto, & Hebl, 2011). an investigation of attitudes towards mental illness in the United States between the 1950s and 1996 revealed that public perceptions regarding the dangerousness of individuals with mental illness has steadily increased rather than decreased over this time (Silton et al., 2011). A similar study conducted in England and Scotland analyzed trends in public attitudes towards individuals with mental illness between the years of 1994 and 2003. Results from this study revealed a steady increase in the public’s stigmatizing attitudes towards mental illness, particularly between the years 2000 and 2003 (Mehta, Kassam, Leese, Butler, & Thornicroft, 2009). A research was conducted on students pursuing psychiatry assessing their attitudes specially empathy towards mentally ill people. The findings showed that the students held less stigma towards individuals with mental illness, due to their psychiatric education, and female students displayed more levels of empathy than male students (Reddy, Tan, Azmi, Shaharom, Rosdinom, Maniam, et al.). However not all studies have shown positive attitude towards mental health. Despite nurses espousing beliefs that mental health care was an integral component …show more content…

The findings showed that as the severity of the depression increased, simultaneously the stigmatization levels increased. The findings also showed that undertaking treatment also increased stigma levels (Pyne, Kuc, Schroeder, Fortney, Edlund & Sullivan, 2004). However, in contradiction to this study, research has found that stigma towards severe mental illness is lowered as the participants in the study were already exposed to this population and were provided information on the relation between severe mental illness and violence (Penn & Martin,

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