Recovery psychology/Stigma, Discrimination and Prejudice

< Recovery psychology

"Recovery is the process of overcoming the negative impact of a psychiatric disability despite its continued presence"
--The Ohio Department of Mental Health

Statistics on recovery

  • Depression 80%
  • Panic Disorder 70-90%
  • Schizophrenia 60%
  • Heart Disease 45-50%--NIMH 2002

Stigma, Discrimination and Prejudice

Internalized Stigma and Acceptance

Stigma becomes internalized by persons with psychological disorders. If a person is treated as incompetent, they begin to act as if they are incompetent. However, it has been found that when a person with a psychological disorder accepts their disorder, great strides in recovery soon occur (page 95 of Psychiatric Rehabilitation 2002 C. Pratt, K. Gill, N. Barrett, M. Roberts.)-see Kubler-Ross Two types of stigma exist in the mental health consumer community which fall under the concept of internalized stigma: Interstigma, which is where an individual stigmatizes oneself. Intrastigma in which a person with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder may stigmatize another person with schizophrenia or borderline personality disorder.


Externalized Stigma and Discrimination

Essay Question

Focus on Controversy

  1. If Mr. Sonnen is telling the truth, has the media denied Mr. Sonnens' recovery?
  2. If this is so, then have those who have stigmatized and accused him also denied his recovery?
  3. Does this further escalate stigma of psychological disorders?
  4. Should not research on the potential school shooters who never do shootings be done from a recovery prespective? Is the person who was angry at the world, was suicidal, felt persecution, had on external sense of locus of control and wanted revenge not considered a case of recovery, if recovered from that doomed state of mind? Would not it be worth the study time that (Harvard psychologist) William Pollack spends on shooters post-mortem, to study living people who did not hurt anyone? Is recovery not the thing to study, if the overall goal is prevention?
  5. Are clinical psychologists, psychiatrists, on campuses and in the media perpeptuating stigma by not supporting the recovery concept? Are they not supporting the body bag model instead of the recovery model, if they study post-mortem tragedy, and fail to study those who did not act violently?
  6. As a result of school shootings, some have proposed the idea, of letting students be armed to protect themselves on college campuses. What level of psychosocial stress do you think this might place on an already stigmatized and marginalized minority? If you felt bullied by people who were not armed, would you feel any less bullied by the same people if they were armed with firearms?

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