|
"Stigma is an important consideration for health
policy and clinical practice for several reasons. It contributes to
the suffering from illness in various ways, and it may delay
appropriate help-seeking or terminate treatment for treatable health
problems. For diseases and disorders that are highly stigmatized,
the impact of the meaning of the disease may be as great or a
greater source of suffering than symptoms of a disease. An early
presentations of paucibacillary leprosy as a painless depigmented or
anaesthetic patch is an example. Hearing the diagnosis is more
troubling than symptoms of the disease. Social science studies of
stigma regard it fundamentally as a problem arising from social
interactions. Goffman and other researchers have also recognized
self-perceived stigma, which may also be troubling and responsible
for diminished self-esteem whether or not it arises from an actual
interaction, and whether or not this perceived stigma accurately
reflects the critical views of others. Stigma impairs the quality of
life through concerns about disclosure, and it affects work,
education, marriage, and family life. Although its impact is likely
to be overlooked in the calculation of Disability-adjusted
life-years stigma contributes to what WHO's Nations for Mental
health Program calls the hidden burden of mental illness. In
addition to the suffering it brings, research also shows that stigma
and labelling may affect the course of recovery
The stigmatization of HIV/AIDS and specific groups at risk, such
as men who have sex with men and illicit drug users, interferes with
voluntary testing, counselling and treatment. Timely treatment may
benefit the individual and society, inasmuch as it reduces suffering
and it improves health and productivity The distasteful prospect of
having a stigmatized condition, which is further associated with
stigmatized status in society, may be an inducement to ignore it and
forego the kind of help that one might readily acknowledge as useful
if the condition were affecting someone else. Although denial may
relieve the anxiety that follows from stigma, denial is a problem
when a treatable condition remains untreated and progresses to cause
avoidable suffering. Leprosy, which has long been the gold standard
of stigmatized diseases, may progress to preventable deformities.
Tuberculosis not only becomes more serious for the infected
individual, but also poses a threat for contacts and further spread.
People with untreated mental health problems may endure an avoidable
progression of symptoms that may also make their condition more
difficult to treat. For chronic diseases that require a long course
of treatment, or chronic treatment for epilepsy, stigma constitutes
an obstacle to remaining in treatment." Interventions: Research
on Reducing Stigma
ADDITIONAL ARTICLES:
|
Document Name & Link to Document |
Description |
File Size /Type |
|
HIV-related stigma & discrimination |
Understanding HIV-related stigma and resulting
discrimination in sub-Saharan Africa |
Pdf 61 kb |
|
Interventions: Research on Reducing Stigma
|
The term stigma has
many associations and implications rooted in history, social
science, and public health, but the historical concept of
physical stigmata and the sociological framework of deviance and
social interactions fall short of research needs for guiding
desirable public health interventions to reduce stigma. For
that, a working definition of stigma is required that recognizes
the distinctive features of particular diseases and particular
social and cultural contexts. Research needs include documenting
the burden from the stigma of various health problems; comparing
both the magnitude and character of stigma for different
conditions and in different social and cultural settings;
identifying distinctive features of stigma that may guide
intervention programs; and evaluating changes in the magnitude
and character of stigma over time and in response to
interventions and social changes. |
|
|
Measuring HIV/AIDS related Stigma |
Stigma, ‘a powerful and discrediting social label that
radically changes the way individuals view themselves and are
viewed as person’, can be felt (internal stigma), leading
to an unwillingness to seek help and access resources, or
enacted (external stigma), leading to discrimination on the
basis of HIV status or association with someone who is living
with HIV/AIDS |
192 kb pdf |
|
Stigma |
What constitutes stigma? |
Pdf 107 kb |
** In order to
view PDF files, you must have Adobe Acrobat Reader installed on your
computer. Many computers already have this software; however, if you
need it, a free copy is available for download at this site:
Click
here to get Adobe Acrobat Reader.
|