Plain
Talk about Stigma
Anna Kosturek, M.D.,
Board Certified Psychiatrist
It’s easy to label someone else and overlook what’s really inside. When
mental illnesses are used as negative labels it leads to branding and
shame, or what is called "stigma." Everyone knows why it is wrong to discriminate
people because of their race, religion, culture, or appearance. They are
less aware of how people with mental illnesses are discriminated against.
Although such discrimination may not always be obvious, it exists and
it hurts.
Stigma discourages people from getting help. At any given time,
one in four adults and one in five children experience a mental health
problem. Early and appropriate services can be the best way to prevent
an illness from getting worse. Many people don’t seek such services because
they don’t want to be labeled as "mentally ill" or "crazy."
Stigma keeps people from getting good jobs and advancing in the workplace.
Some employers are reluctant to hire people who have mental illnesses.
Thanks to the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), such discrimination
is illegal, but, nonetheless, it still happens. Unfortunately, many employer-sponsored
health insurance plans discriminate by providing lower coverage for "mental"
vs "physical" illnesses.
Stigma leads to fear and mistrust. Even though the vast majority
of people who have mental illnesses are no more violent than anyone else,
they are, nonetheless, portrayed as dangerous. Many observers fix a large
share of the blame on the communications media. Often they stress a history
of mental illness when they find it in the backgrounds of people who commit
crimes of violence. Such biased portrayals lead people to fear those who
have mental illnesses.
Today, research has unraveled many of the mysteries about the origins
of mental illness. It has been revealed that many mental illnesses are
actually caused by biochemical imbalances, as is the case with many physical
illnesses.
The mentally ill should not be blamed for their condition any more than
diabetics should be blamed for having diabetes. Uncovering many of the
biochemical imbalances has led to treatment restoring the needed chemical
balances, just as insulin controls the balances for diabetes. As long
as a diabetic person takes the proper dosage of insulin, that person can
live a normal life. It is much the same with mental illness. As long as
the individual with a mental disorder follows prescribed treatments, that
person, too, can lead as normal a life as possible.
As care has been upgraded, so, too, have the settings in which treatment
is given. For many decades, the usual responses to the mentally ill were
to hide them away at home or to relegate them to asylums. Generally, in
these enlightened days, we do not physically remove from our midst those
we do not wish to have around; and we no longer send them to a far-away
asylum. Instead, we isolate them socially, a much more artful though equally
debilitating form of ostracism.
Although we as a society have come far in the way we respond to those
with mental illness, there is still a great distance to go. The following
are some suggestions to end the stigma of mental illness: learn more about
mental illness, insist on the media being more accountable, treat people
with mental illness with dignity and respect (remember people who have
mental illness may include your own friends and family), and finally,
avoid using negative labels in referring to someone with a mental illness.
For more information on this topic, go to our website at www.humanservicescenter.net
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