PURPOSE: When someone has a mental illness, family members may share the experience of stigma. Past research has established that family members' experiences of stigma by association predict psychological distress and lower quality-of-life. METHODS: The present study, conducted with 503 family members of people with mental illness examined the prevalence of 14 different coping strategies. Of greater importance, we examined the role of these coping strategies as mediators of the relationships between stigma by association and family burden, on the one hand, and outcomes, such as psychological distress and quality-of-life, on the other. RESULTS: The results showed that both perceived stigma by association and family burden are associated with...
The views of 487 members of the National Alliance for the Mentally 111 (NAMI) concerning stigma were...
This study investigates the associations between perceived stigma, depressive symptoms and coping am...
People with mental illness are not the sole recipients of stigmatisation; their immediate family mem...
PURPOSE: When someone has a mental illness, family members may share the experience of stigma. Past ...
In this study, we explored stigma by association, family burden, and their impact on the family memb...
Objective: To investigate the relationships between public stigma, stigma by association (SBA), psyc...
Background Stigma affects not only people with mental illnesses, but their families as well. Underst...
Family stigma is associated with persistent negative outcomes among adult children of parents with m...
Background Stigma affects not only people with mental illnesses, but their families as well. Underst...
Stigma negatively affects individuals as well as entire families. Stigma is not limited to the indiv...
Families of individuals with mental illness face a range of practical and emotional stresses. Studie...
Abstract--- Stigma in society about people with mental disorders, especially for schizophrenic patie...
Considerable research has documented the stigmatiza-tion of people with mental illnesses and its neg...
Family members of people with mental disorders can contribute to stigmatization. Because of the lack...
scribefactors associatedwith adap-tive coping by family members with a psychiatrically disabled rela...
The views of 487 members of the National Alliance for the Mentally 111 (NAMI) concerning stigma were...
This study investigates the associations between perceived stigma, depressive symptoms and coping am...
People with mental illness are not the sole recipients of stigmatisation; their immediate family mem...
PURPOSE: When someone has a mental illness, family members may share the experience of stigma. Past ...
In this study, we explored stigma by association, family burden, and their impact on the family memb...
Objective: To investigate the relationships between public stigma, stigma by association (SBA), psyc...
Background Stigma affects not only people with mental illnesses, but their families as well. Underst...
Family stigma is associated with persistent negative outcomes among adult children of parents with m...
Background Stigma affects not only people with mental illnesses, but their families as well. Underst...
Stigma negatively affects individuals as well as entire families. Stigma is not limited to the indiv...
Families of individuals with mental illness face a range of practical and emotional stresses. Studie...
Abstract--- Stigma in society about people with mental disorders, especially for schizophrenic patie...
Considerable research has documented the stigmatiza-tion of people with mental illnesses and its neg...
Family members of people with mental disorders can contribute to stigmatization. Because of the lack...
scribefactors associatedwith adap-tive coping by family members with a psychiatrically disabled rela...
The views of 487 members of the National Alliance for the Mentally 111 (NAMI) concerning stigma were...
This study investigates the associations between perceived stigma, depressive symptoms and coping am...
People with mental illness are not the sole recipients of stigmatisation; their immediate family mem...