Stigma keeps some Latinos from Depression
Treatment
Newswise — A new, small study of low-income, depressed
Latinos finds that those who stigmatize
mental illness are less likely than others
are to take medication, keep scheduled
appointments and control their condition.
The findings could help physicians develop a series of
question to identity patients who might
especially be resistant to care and then
help them understand how treatment works,
said lead study author William Vega.
“Unfortunately, mental-health stigma turns out to be one of
the most serious barriers for people
receiving care or staying in care,” said
Vega, professor of medicine and social work
at the University of Southern California.
Many cultures have stereotypes about depression and mental
illness, he said, with some viewing it as
something that will brand a family for
generations. Latinos, in particular, value
resilience and think, “it’s a cultural value
to be able to handle your own affairs,” he
said. “If you can’t, it implies that you’re
weak.”
While it might not be surprising that Latinos stigmatize
mental illness, “like many things, it’s all
anecdotes and innuendo until you do
something more solid, like a research study,
and start finding out what the issues are,”
said Vega, who worked on the study with
fellow researchers while at the University
of California at Los Angeles.
In the new study, published in the March/April issue of the
journal General Hospital Psychiatry,
researchers surveyed 200 poor,
Spanish-speaking Latinos in Los Angeles.
They all had visited local primary care
centers; 83 percent were women. All had
shown signs of depression in an initial
screening.
Another screening found that all but 54 of the 200
individuals were mildly to severely
depressed. Researchers deemed 51 percent as
those who stigmatize mental illness, based
on responses to questions about things like
the trustworthiness of a depressed person.
The researchers found that those who stigmatized mental
illness were 22 percent less apt to be
taking depression medication, 21 percent
less likely to be able to control their
depression and about 44 percent more likely
to have missed scheduled mental-health
appointments.
The findings “shows evidence that stigma does exist, and
it’s related to things that are important to
provide as part of proper treatment,” Vega
said.
Jamie Walkup, a Rutgers University associate professor of
psychology who studies mental health and
stigma, said the key is to find ways to
“push back against these negative ideas,
hoping that a person with depression will no
longer let an aversion to being a person
with depression stop them from doing what
they may need to do to get help.”
It might be worth asking, he said, “whether it may
sometimes make more sense to switch gears
with a patient who, for whatever reason,
finds it intolerable to think of themselves
as having depression.”
In such cases, doctors could find other ways to work with
these patients without insisting that they
acknowledge their diagnosis.
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