Out of the silos: identifying cross-cutting features of health-related stigma to advance measurement and intervention

Abstract Background Many health conditions perceived to be contagious, dangerous or incurable, or resulting in clearly visible signs, share a common attribute – an association with stigma and discrimination. While the etiology of stigma may differ between conditions and, sometimes, cultural settings...

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Main Authors: Wim H. van Brakel, Janine Cataldo, Sandeep Grover, Brandon A. Kohrt, Laura Nyblade, Melissa Stockton, Edwin Wouters, Lawrence H. Yang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-02-01
Series:BMC Medicine
Subjects:
HIV
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12916-018-1245-x
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spelling doaj-ccf8dc9e82a84373b024395c1852b33a2020-11-25T03:15:05ZengBMCBMC Medicine1741-70152019-02-0117111710.1186/s12916-018-1245-xOut of the silos: identifying cross-cutting features of health-related stigma to advance measurement and interventionWim H. van Brakel0Janine Cataldo1Sandeep Grover2Brandon A. Kohrt3Laura Nyblade4Melissa Stockton5Edwin Wouters6Lawrence H. Yang7NLRDepartment of Physiological Nursing, Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education, University of California San FranciscoDepartment of Psychiatry, PGIMERDepartment of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, George Washington UniversityRTI InternationalEpidemiology Department, UNC Gillings School of Global Public HealthCentre for Longitudinal & Life Course Studies, University of AntwerpCollege of Global Public Health, New York UniversityAbstract Background Many health conditions perceived to be contagious, dangerous or incurable, or resulting in clearly visible signs, share a common attribute – an association with stigma and discrimination. While the etiology of stigma may differ between conditions and, sometimes, cultural settings, the manifestations and psychosocial consequences of stigma and discrimination are remarkably similar. However, the vast majority of studies measuring stigma or addressing stigma through interventions employ a disease-specific approach. Main body The current paper opposes this siloed approach and advocates a generic concept of ‘health-related stigma’ in both stigma measurement and stigma interventions. Employing a conceptual model adapted from Weiss, the current paper demonstrates the commonalities among several major stigmatized conditions by examining how several stigma measurement instruments, such as the Social Distance Scale, Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue, Internalized Stigma of Mental Illness, and Berger stigma scale, and stigma reduction interventions, such as information-based approaches, contact with affected persons, (peer) counselling, and skills building and empowerment, were used successfully across a variety of conditions to measure or address stigma. The results demonstrate that ‘health-related stigma’ is a viable concept with clearly identifiable characteristics that are similar across a variety of stigmatized health conditions in very diverse cultures. Conclusion A more generic approach to the study of health-related stigma opens up important practical opportunities – cross-cutting measurement and intervention tools are resource saving and easier to use for personnel working with multiple conditions, allow for comparison between conditions, and recognize the intersectionality of many types of stigma. Further research is needed to build additional evidence demonstrating the advantages and effectiveness of cross-condition approaches to stigma measurement and interventions.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12916-018-1245-xHealth-related stigmameasurementinterventionscross-cutting approachesHIVmental health
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wim H. van Brakel
Janine Cataldo
Sandeep Grover
Brandon A. Kohrt
Laura Nyblade
Melissa Stockton
Edwin Wouters
Lawrence H. Yang
spellingShingle Wim H. van Brakel
Janine Cataldo
Sandeep Grover
Brandon A. Kohrt
Laura Nyblade
Melissa Stockton
Edwin Wouters
Lawrence H. Yang
Out of the silos: identifying cross-cutting features of health-related stigma to advance measurement and intervention
BMC Medicine
Health-related stigma
measurement
interventions
cross-cutting approaches
HIV
mental health
author_facet Wim H. van Brakel
Janine Cataldo
Sandeep Grover
Brandon A. Kohrt
Laura Nyblade
Melissa Stockton
Edwin Wouters
Lawrence H. Yang
author_sort Wim H. van Brakel
title Out of the silos: identifying cross-cutting features of health-related stigma to advance measurement and intervention
title_short Out of the silos: identifying cross-cutting features of health-related stigma to advance measurement and intervention
title_full Out of the silos: identifying cross-cutting features of health-related stigma to advance measurement and intervention
title_fullStr Out of the silos: identifying cross-cutting features of health-related stigma to advance measurement and intervention
title_full_unstemmed Out of the silos: identifying cross-cutting features of health-related stigma to advance measurement and intervention
title_sort out of the silos: identifying cross-cutting features of health-related stigma to advance measurement and intervention
publisher BMC
series BMC Medicine
issn 1741-7015
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Abstract Background Many health conditions perceived to be contagious, dangerous or incurable, or resulting in clearly visible signs, share a common attribute – an association with stigma and discrimination. While the etiology of stigma may differ between conditions and, sometimes, cultural settings, the manifestations and psychosocial consequences of stigma and discrimination are remarkably similar. However, the vast majority of studies measuring stigma or addressing stigma through interventions employ a disease-specific approach. Main body The current paper opposes this siloed approach and advocates a generic concept of ‘health-related stigma’ in both stigma measurement and stigma interventions. Employing a conceptual model adapted from Weiss, the current paper demonstrates the commonalities among several major stigmatized conditions by examining how several stigma measurement instruments, such as the Social Distance Scale, Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue, Internalized Stigma of Mental Illness, and Berger stigma scale, and stigma reduction interventions, such as information-based approaches, contact with affected persons, (peer) counselling, and skills building and empowerment, were used successfully across a variety of conditions to measure or address stigma. The results demonstrate that ‘health-related stigma’ is a viable concept with clearly identifiable characteristics that are similar across a variety of stigmatized health conditions in very diverse cultures. Conclusion A more generic approach to the study of health-related stigma opens up important practical opportunities – cross-cutting measurement and intervention tools are resource saving and easier to use for personnel working with multiple conditions, allow for comparison between conditions, and recognize the intersectionality of many types of stigma. Further research is needed to build additional evidence demonstrating the advantages and effectiveness of cross-condition approaches to stigma measurement and interventions.
topic Health-related stigma
measurement
interventions
cross-cutting approaches
HIV
mental health
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12916-018-1245-x
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