Results 271 to 280 of about 164,702 (308)
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Implicit Self-Stigma in People With Mental Illness
Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 2010People with mental illness often internalize negative stereotypes, resulting in self-stigma and low self-esteem ("People with mental illness are bad and therefore I am bad, too"). Despite strong evidence for self-stigma's negative impact as assessed by self-report measures, it is unclear whether self-stigma operates in an automatic, implicit manner ...
Rüsch, Nicolas +3 more
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Self-stigma: A personal journey.
Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal, 2015This contribution describes a personal recovery journey and highlights the value and importance of engagement in peer-to-peer services to help promote growth and transformation.In this contribution, the author emphasizes the significance of educating and supporting others to overcome the barriers of self-stigma to gain both a positive self-image and ...
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2019
Self-stigma in addiction occurs when individuals with substance use disorders (SUDs) experience shame based on mythological stereotypes in public stigma, as well as from their own sense of what they take to be shameful about addiction. This process leads to changes in identity in line with negative stigmatising stereotypes.
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Self-stigma in addiction occurs when individuals with substance use disorders (SUDs) experience shame based on mythological stereotypes in public stigma, as well as from their own sense of what they take to be shameful about addiction. This process leads to changes in identity in line with negative stigmatising stereotypes.
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Identifying and addressing mental health self‐stigma
The Brown University Child and Adolescent Behavior Letter, 2021The stigmatization of mental health disorders is a major barrier to help‐seeking and can cause significant distress. The majority of discourse about mental health stigma in research and media focuses on public stigma; however, self‐stigma also has a significant impact on individuals with mental health concerns.
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[Bipolar disorders and self-stigma].
Revue medicale suisse, 2016Despite wide media coverage in recent years, the stigmatization of people with bipolar disorder still exists. Bipolar people also have their own tendency to self-stigmatize that is to integrate their beliefs, prejudices and stigmatizing behaviors. The consequences are important: shame, guilt, withdrawal and renunciation to lead one's own life according
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Self-Stigma, Identity, and Co-Occurring Disorders.
The Israel journal of psychiatry and related sciences, 2018A four stage regressive model that links public stigma to self-stigma is applied to mental illness and substance use disorder. We assess this four stage model in those with co-occurring disorders versus those who have mental illness or substance use disorder alone.366 people who self-identified as having either a mental illness or co-occurring mental ...
Maya A, Al-Khouja, Patrick W, Corrigan
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Self-stigma in schizophrenia: a concept analysis.
Nursing forum, 2015This study aimed to clarify the phenomenon and definition of self-stigma in schizophrenia.Self-stigma in schizophrenia affects patients' well-being and attitudes to treatment. Although stigma and self-stigma have interactive and different characteristics, theses definitions are not clearly distinguished.
Yoshimi, Omori +2 more
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