Labelling effects and adolescent responses to peers with depression: an experimental investigation

Abstract Background The impact of illness labels on the stigma experiences of individuals with mental health problems is a matter of ongoing debate. Some argue that labels have a negative influence on judgments and should be avoided in favour of information emphasising the existence of a continuum o...

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Main Authors: Louise Dolphin, Eilis Hennessy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-06-01
Series:BMC Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-017-1389-9
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spelling doaj-1985bed58a2f4d6a8331f892dd465ea42020-11-24T23:46:18ZengBMCBMC Psychiatry1471-244X2017-06-0117111010.1186/s12888-017-1389-9Labelling effects and adolescent responses to peers with depression: an experimental investigationLouise Dolphin0Eilis Hennessy1School of Psychology, University College DublinSchool of Psychology, University College DublinAbstract Background The impact of illness labels on the stigma experiences of individuals with mental health problems is a matter of ongoing debate. Some argue that labels have a negative influence on judgments and should be avoided in favour of information emphasising the existence of a continuum of mental health/illness. Others believe that behavioral symptoms are more powerful influencers of stigma than labels. The phenomenon has received little attention in adolescent research, despite the critical importance of the peer group at this developmental stage. This study employs a novel experimental design to examine the impact of the depression label and continuum information on adolescents’ responses to peers with depression. Methods Participants were 156 adolescents, 76 male, 80 female (M = 16.25 years; SD = .361), assigned to one of three conditions (Control, Label, Continuum). Participants respond to four audio-visual vignette characters (two clinically depressed) on three occasions. Outcome measures included judgment of the mental health of the vignette characters and emotional responses to them. Results Neither the provision of a depression label or continuum information influenced perceptions of the mental health of the characters in the audio-visual vignettes or participants’ emotional responses to them. Conclusion The findings have implications for the design of interventions to combat depression stigma with adolescents. Interventions should not necessarily target perceptions of psychiatric labels, but rather perceptions of symptomatic behaviour.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-017-1389-9LabellingStigmaGenderPeers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Louise Dolphin
Eilis Hennessy
spellingShingle Louise Dolphin
Eilis Hennessy
Labelling effects and adolescent responses to peers with depression: an experimental investigation
BMC Psychiatry
Labelling
Stigma
Gender
Peers
author_facet Louise Dolphin
Eilis Hennessy
author_sort Louise Dolphin
title Labelling effects and adolescent responses to peers with depression: an experimental investigation
title_short Labelling effects and adolescent responses to peers with depression: an experimental investigation
title_full Labelling effects and adolescent responses to peers with depression: an experimental investigation
title_fullStr Labelling effects and adolescent responses to peers with depression: an experimental investigation
title_full_unstemmed Labelling effects and adolescent responses to peers with depression: an experimental investigation
title_sort labelling effects and adolescent responses to peers with depression: an experimental investigation
publisher BMC
series BMC Psychiatry
issn 1471-244X
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Abstract Background The impact of illness labels on the stigma experiences of individuals with mental health problems is a matter of ongoing debate. Some argue that labels have a negative influence on judgments and should be avoided in favour of information emphasising the existence of a continuum of mental health/illness. Others believe that behavioral symptoms are more powerful influencers of stigma than labels. The phenomenon has received little attention in adolescent research, despite the critical importance of the peer group at this developmental stage. This study employs a novel experimental design to examine the impact of the depression label and continuum information on adolescents’ responses to peers with depression. Methods Participants were 156 adolescents, 76 male, 80 female (M = 16.25 years; SD = .361), assigned to one of three conditions (Control, Label, Continuum). Participants respond to four audio-visual vignette characters (two clinically depressed) on three occasions. Outcome measures included judgment of the mental health of the vignette characters and emotional responses to them. Results Neither the provision of a depression label or continuum information influenced perceptions of the mental health of the characters in the audio-visual vignettes or participants’ emotional responses to them. Conclusion The findings have implications for the design of interventions to combat depression stigma with adolescents. Interventions should not necessarily target perceptions of psychiatric labels, but rather perceptions of symptomatic behaviour.
topic Labelling
Stigma
Gender
Peers
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-017-1389-9
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