Examining effects of anticipated stigma, centrality, salience, internalization, and outness on psychological distress for people with concealable stigmatized identities

Understanding how stigmatized identities contribute to increased rates of depression and anxiety is critical to stigma reduction and mental health treatment. There has been little research testing multiple aspects of stigmatized identities simultaneously. In the current study, we collected data from...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2014-05, Vol.9 (5), p.e96977-e96977
Hauptverfasser: Quinn, Diane M, Williams, Michelle K, Quintana, Francisco, Gaskins, Jennifer L, Overstreet, Nicole M, Pishori, Alefiyah, Earnshaw, Valerie A, Perez, Giselle, Chaudoir, Stephenie R
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container_end_page e96977
container_issue 5
container_start_page e96977
container_title PloS one
container_volume 9
creator Quinn, Diane M
Williams, Michelle K
Quintana, Francisco
Gaskins, Jennifer L
Overstreet, Nicole M
Pishori, Alefiyah
Earnshaw, Valerie A
Perez, Giselle
Chaudoir, Stephenie R
description Understanding how stigmatized identities contribute to increased rates of depression and anxiety is critical to stigma reduction and mental health treatment. There has been little research testing multiple aspects of stigmatized identities simultaneously. In the current study, we collected data from a diverse, urban, adult community sample of people with a concealed stigmatized identity (CSI). We targeted 5 specific CSIs--mental illness, substance abuse, experience of domestic violence, experience of sexual assault, and experience of childhood abuse--that have been shown to put people at risk for increased psychological distress. We collected measures of the anticipation of being devalued by others if the identity became known (anticipated stigma), the level of defining oneself by the stigmatized identity (centrality), the frequency of thinking about the identity (salience), the extent of agreement with negative stereotypes about the identity (internalized stigma), and extent to which other people currently know about the identity (outness). Results showed that greater anticipated stigma, greater identity salience, and lower levels of outness each uniquely and significantly predicted variance in increased psychological distress (a composite of depression and anxiety). In examining communalities and differences across the five identities, we found that mean levels of the stigma variables differed across the identities, with people with substance abuse and mental illness reporting greater anticipated and internalized stigma. However, the prediction pattern of the variables for psychological distress was similar across the substance abuse, mental illness, domestic violence, and childhood abuse identities (but not sexual assault). Understanding which components of stigmatized identities predict distress can lead to more effective treatment for people experiencing psychological distress.
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0096977
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There has been little research testing multiple aspects of stigmatized identities simultaneously. In the current study, we collected data from a diverse, urban, adult community sample of people with a concealed stigmatized identity (CSI). We targeted 5 specific CSIs--mental illness, substance abuse, experience of domestic violence, experience of sexual assault, and experience of childhood abuse--that have been shown to put people at risk for increased psychological distress. We collected measures of the anticipation of being devalued by others if the identity became known (anticipated stigma), the level of defining oneself by the stigmatized identity (centrality), the frequency of thinking about the identity (salience), the extent of agreement with negative stereotypes about the identity (internalized stigma), and extent to which other people currently know about the identity (outness). Results showed that greater anticipated stigma, greater identity salience, and lower levels of outness each uniquely and significantly predicted variance in increased psychological distress (a composite of depression and anxiety). In examining communalities and differences across the five identities, we found that mean levels of the stigma variables differed across the identities, with people with substance abuse and mental illness reporting greater anticipated and internalized stigma. However, the prediction pattern of the variables for psychological distress was similar across the substance abuse, mental illness, domestic violence, and childhood abuse identities (but not sexual assault). Understanding which components of stigmatized identities predict distress can lead to more effective treatment for people experiencing psychological distress.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Public Library of Science</pub><pmid>24817189</pmid><doi>10.1371/journal.pone.0096977</doi><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
Adult
Aggression
AIDS
Analysis
Anticipation, Psychological
Anxiety
Anxiety - psychology
Biology and Life Sciences
Child abuse
Child abuse & neglect
Childhood
Children
College students
Depression - psychology
Domestic violence
Drug abuse
Experience
Female
HIV
Human immunodeficiency virus
Humans
Identity
Interdisciplinary aspects
Internalization
Male
Medicine and Health Sciences
Mental depression
Mental disorders
Mental health
Mental health care
Mental health services
Minority & ethnic groups
Models, Statistical
Predictions
Psychological distress
Psychology
Salience
Sex crimes
Sexual abuse
Sexual assault
Sexual orientation
Social Identification
Social Sciences
Social Stigma
Stereotypes
Stigma
Stress (Psychology)
Stress, Psychological - psychology
Substance abuse
Variables
Violence
title Examining effects of anticipated stigma, centrality, salience, internalization, and outness on psychological distress for people with concealable stigmatized identities
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