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“The only thing necessary for these diseases to the triumph is for good people and governments to do nothing.”


THE ORIGINS OF STIGMATIZATION:
Further commentary:
The tendency to stigmatize

 

 

Arthur Crisp

 

http://www.stigma.org/everyfamily/acrisp4.html

 

 

 

 

This time-honoured propensity has probably served mankind and its ancestors well in protecting the species and ensuring personal survival. Such biological mechanisms as those subserving immediate survival, the quest for food, reproduction and related territorial needs are presumably its foundation. Moreover, the crudity of categorisation and labelling of related perceived possible threats needs, constitutionally, to be safely over-inclusive, before juggling the consequent options of relating to, coming to dominate, fleeing from or ignoring the source.

In recent social history such core matters as race and political persuasion, diseases such as leprosy, cancer, AIDS, and various physical handicaps have all triggered this process. One can see with just these few examples, how idiosyncratic are the concerns evoked, e.g. perceived immediate physical danger, excessive demands for change, death, infection. Many factors influence the natural history of such stigmatizations; for instance, changing familiarity, better general control over the perceived threat, assertiveness of the minority group concerned, changing societal and personal value judgements.

Throughout this time, the stigmatization of people with mental illnesses has prevailed, with rare exceptions. Western man has brought his particular perception to bear. Mental illnesses have some unique properties. They express themselves primarily through cognitive, affective and behavioural symptoms and signs; those very dimensions that make us what we are as individuals. The afflicted person may be perceived as identified with, and not separate from, the illness (Alison-Bolger 1999). Psychiatry itself adopts this perspective with many mental illnesses as it attempts to explain links between the illness and the individual's development, their personality and their relationships.This biopsychosocial model may be widely applicable but it is often restricted, in the public's mind, to mental illness. Perceived negative aspects of the illness then readily attach themselves to the afflicted person, as also happens, for instance, with physical illnesses regarded as self-inflicted. Secondly, unlike many other stigmatized groups, (e.g. the physically disabled, with their ramps, rumble strips, Olympic Games and back-up legislation) the mentally ill rarely fight their corner. The nature of their illnesses, whether characterized for instance, by inertia, egosyntonicity or cognitive breakdown, militates against it. Meanwhile, one of the features of the recent 'Changing Minds' campaign survey (Crisp et al. 2000, Gelder 2000) has been its attempt to secure public opinion concerning six or seven mental illnesses. Sufficient of the public clearly recognises differences between these illnesses and this is reflected in the differing negative opinions expressed concerning each of them.
 



The literature on this subject is patchy. It has tended to focus on schizophrenia and depression and much of the best has recently emanated from Australia where related and well organised anti-stigma campaigns have run through much of the last decade. A recent Department of Health commissioned literature review on public attitudes to mental health/illness (DoH 1999) concluded that the experience, 'does not bring a strong sense of understanding, but rather of acknowledgment - that we do think of those with mental health problems in this discriminatory way'. The authors suggested that, 'the origins of fear and dislike of those with mental health problems may well from a deeper spring in society'. The report implies that greater understanding at this level may be a necessary next step if change is to occur. The ways in which we have come to apply our natural capacities and instincts to the tasks of relating or not relating to those of us with mental illnesses in our given and changing cultures and with our existential concerns, would seem to provide the arena for this quest.

The self-interest hypothesis
Recently, Haghighat (2001) has presented a 'self-interest' theory as providing the basis for our proneness to stigmatize. 'Self-interest' could be advanced as a reason for much human behaviour. So far as stigmatization of people with mental illnesses is concerned, 'self-interest' in its broadest sense is a useful unifying proposition serving a range of purposes from protection of self-esteem, reinforcement of mental defence mechanisms, through to protection of socio-economic status and potential for economic exploitation. Haghighat attaches most importance to the licence it provides for socio-economic exploitation. He reviews literature which reflects the breadth of vision he wishes to bring to bear. Within 'Constitutional origins', which oddly he distances from genetic influences, he cites the work of experimental psychologists which supports notions of the need safely but broadly to categorise potential threats and thereafter, if confirmed, to load them with other negative attributes. He considers 'Psychological origins', and the chosen literature consolidates the notion that, defensively, we need to identify scapegoats and thereafter to condemn and avoid them. Thereafter he proposes that stigmatizations, whether they be of another race, fellow competitors or people with mental illnesses, are weapons in socio-economic competition. He seemingly sees no biological substrate to this theme, but pauses briefly to present possible independent evolutionary influences, serving species rather than personal self-interests. Could our present-day attitude partly be fuelled by our ancient need to distance ourselves from 'poor reproductive bets' and those who are 'sexually unattractive' (Gilbert & McGuire 1998)? More certainly, the severely and chronically mentally ill may be perceived as 'poor economic bets' when it comes to considerations of reproduction and its more immediate social consequences. He concludes by advancing the plausible proposition that, 'the fundamental basis of all stigmatization is pursuit of self-interest' which society naturally comes to enshrine.

If we propose that our repertoire of responses has evolutionary biological origins we can then consider how they have been harnessed to serve man's present self-interest when confronted by those with mental illnesses in his midst. For instance, the recent 'Changing Minds' campaign national survey shows that people with schizophrenia and the addictions in particular, are perceived by the majority of the public as dangerous, and therefore are likely directly to evoke ancient considerations of control or flight. That perception is of course generally exaggerated and its fuelling is another matter for consideration. Adverse and selective media attention, lack of diagnostic clarity and co-morbidity are some of the factors that have led people to perceive those with schizophrenia as much more dangerous than they are. Sontag (1988) writing within the context of having cancer herself, stated '...diseases acquire meaning (by coming to stand for the deepest fears)... . It seems that societies need to have one illness, which becomes identified with evil, and attaches blame to its 'victims'... . Any disease that is treated as a mystery and acutely enough feared will [also] be felt to be morally if not literally, contagious'. Finzen and Hoffmann-Richter (1999) suggest that schizophrenia, in recent years, has taken on this mantle to an ever greater extent, from cancer and AIDS which Sontag was writing about. Haghighat's emphasis on self-interest expressing itself importantly in terms of economic exploitation can apply to all mental illnesses although he does not identify any particular ones and may mainly have had schizophrenia in mind throughout much of his discourse.
 



In contrast, the campaign survey reveals the theme of perceived self-infliction, especially in respect of the addictions but also in those afflicted with eating disorders, who, however, are not also seen as dangerous. Similar literature over the years has revealed this same association in the public's mind (DoH 1999). It raises the problems of 'free-will' and 'choice' which Haghighat does not address. Perhaps we can only cope with this dilemma by not discussing it. Belief in it, is often the corner stone of our self-image, at least in the western world; it is also the basis of law and order in society. Max Hamilton used to comment, "Free-will is something we believe we have, but we equally believe that we can predict how others will behave". In psychiatry we constantly seek determining explanations both for form and content of mental illnesses. At the same time, we usually operate as if our patients have choice though we may also know that sometimes, their decisions, e.g. whether to engage in the prospects of change, will depend upon the context (such as experience of stigmatization, legal constraints, transferences within therapy). Meanwhile, this dilemma may be at the heart of people's tendency to blame such groups of patients in particular. Haghighat considers that psychological mechanisms may be at work here, though he stops short of examining their relationship to the stigmatizer's own personality and its robustness or otherwise in respect of defences against personal dysphoria (Hughes 2000). Yet, as with responses to dangerousness, it accords with his self-interest hypothesis.

Two of Haghighat's main thrusts have to do with the view (e.g. Littlewood 1998) that we may be prone to take advantage of the mentally ill by exploiting them economically. This could be linked closely to our ancestral origins and those commonplace natural behaviours of attempted territorial domination and its purposes. Haghighat himself examines causation categorically. Although ultimately he extols a monistic philosophy, he does not, for instance, seriously attempt to explore interactions between psychological and sociopolitical perspectives.

Interventions
Haghighat concludes with an inventory of interventions which he hopes might collectively provide opportunities to mute the self-interest that drives our stigmatization of, distancing from and otherwise our exploitation of the mentally ill. Several of these fit comfortably with the campaign's survey finding that the public overwhelmingly perceives people with all mental illnesses as difficult to communicate and empathise with. Such perceptions and expectations promote distancing, social exclusion and ignorance. An association between prejudice and ignorance has long been demonstrated though the nature of that relationship is unclear. Haghighat commends educational programmes and is aware of their limitations in reaching out to people's deep fears. He sees the potential value of familiarity with people with mental illnesses, providing it is accompanied by the necessary social skills. He applauds, though he is also sceptical of, the work of Wolff and his colleagues (Wolff, Pathare, Craig et al 1996) and Leff (2000) who have begun to develop and evaluate neighbourhood induction programmes. In this connection, a recent community psychiatric nursing initiative in Glasgow is also noteworthy (Kaminski & Harty 1999).

But Haghighat's main hope appears to be that mankind will grow up and adopt a more fraternal caring society, throwing off his biologically driven competitive nature and evolving along correct ideological lines. However, he describes also the chaos into which we are thrust these days through endless bombardment with information and our increasing geographical mobility - and acknowledges that, under such circumstances, we may become defensively prone to ever coarser negative compartmentalising and labelling processes. Mankind has always had the capacity to be more cruel than nature requires. Along with his belief that fraternal ideologies will triumph over the law of the jungle, Haghighat identifies the need to curb undue competition and freedom to exploit others in the interests of the entire community. Much law and custom are designed to do just that. But justice and compassion in particular are not the prerogative of the State. Such morality can also have other springs. Toleration of the mentally ill has occasionally been more evident in ancient civilizations. Theologians (Lewis 1943) have sometimes equated social and scientific evolution with moral decline, i.e. cognitive development without the corresponding affective maturation and related increase in self-awareness that Haghighat reminds us is the key to personal growth. Befriending the mentally ill today is importantly a voluntary activity, doubtless with origins as diverse as those fuelling social exclusion of the mentally ill. There is agreement that, above all, we need more than ever to search for and respect the uniqueness of the individual apart from his/her illness; yet also recognise the contributions to civilization that have sprung from such associations. Also to remember the value of hybrid vigour and the awful sterile dangers of genetic standardisation.

As a campaign such as 'Changing Minds: Every family in the land' strives to achieve this goal by opening up this inescapable agenda for public attention we shall still need to try to empower the mentally ill to test out the relevance, to their own potential self-interests, of the current Disability Discrimination Act (DDA) and the soon to emerge U.K. human rights legislation. We may also need both to acknowledge our biologically driven behaviours before we can more effectively shape and curb them, and to become more knowledgeable about and comfortable about ourselves, before we become more at ease with mental illness in others. Apart from good protective legislation, greater public self-awareness is probably now essential for significant and enduring change. Meanwhile, Haghighat's contribution deserves recognition as an early building block and social prompt in our efforts to penetrate to and mute this unattractive and tenacious human trait of unfairly labelling and seriously disadvantaging others.

References
Alison-Bolger YY (1999) The Original sin of madness - or how psychiatrists can stigmatise their patients. International Journal of Clinical Practice 53: 627-630.
Crisp A H, Gelder MG, Rix S et al. (2000) Stigmatisation of people with mental illnesses. British Journal of Psychiatry 177: 4-7.
Department of Health (1999) General public attitudes to mental health/illness. Prepared for Central Office of Information CO1 Ref: RS4206.
Gelder M (2000) The Royal College of Psychiatry's survey of public opinion about mentally ill people. In: Crisp AH (ed) Every Family in the Land. www.stigma.org.
Gilbert P & McGuire M (1998) Shame; Social roles and status; the psychobiological continuum from monkey to human. In: Gilbert P & Andrews B (eds) Shame; Interpersonal Behaviour, Psychopathology and Culture. New York: Oxford University Press Pp. 99-125.
Haghighat R (2001) A unitary theory of stigmatization. British Journal of Psychiatry 178: 207-215.
Hughes P (2000) Stigmatisation as a survival strategy: Intrapsychic mechanisms. In: Crisp AH (ed) Every Family in the Land. www.stigma.org
Kaminski P & Harty C (1999) From stigma to strategy. Nursing Standard 13: 36-40.
Leff J (2000) Contemporary images and the future: stigmatization of people with schizophrenia. In: Crisp AH (ed) Every Family in the Land. www.stigma.org.
Lewis CS ( 1943) The Abolition of Man. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Littlewood R (1998) Cultural variation in the stigmatisation of mental illness. Lancet, 352: 1056-1057.
Sontag S (1988) AIDS and its Metaphors. London: Penguin Books.
Wolff G, Pathare S, Craig T et al. (1996) Public education for community care: a new approach. British Journal of Psychiatry 168: 441-447.

Acknowledgement
Copyright 2001 Royal College of Psychiatrists. Reproduced with the kind permission of the Editor and the College from the British Journal of Psychiatry, 178: 197-199,

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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