Research Topics
| P W CorriganSummaryAffiliation: University of Chicago Country: USA Publications
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Publications
Prejudice, social distance, and familiarity with mental illnessP W Corrigan
University of ChicagoCenter for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Schizophr Bull 27:219-25. 2001..These forms of prejudice, in turn, are influenced by the believers' familiarity with mental illness and their ethnicity. We also discuss how these findings might contribute to a fuller understanding of mental illness stigma...
Familiarity with and social distance from people who have serious mental illnessP W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, Illinois 60477, USA
Psychiatr Serv 52:953-8. 2001..This study examined the effects of familiarity with and social distance from persons who have serious mental illness on stigmatizing attitudes about mental illness...
Disseminating evidence-based mental health practicesPatrick Corrigan
Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, University of Chicago, USA
Evid Based Ment Health 6:4-5. 2003
Factors that explain how policy makers distribute resources to mental health servicesPatrick W Corrigan
Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, University of Chicago, 7230 Arbor Drive, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Psychiatr Serv 54:501-7. 2003....
Social support and recovery in people with serious mental illnessesPatrick W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, 7230 Arbor Drive, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Community Ment Health J 40:513-23. 2004..For the most part, network size and satisfaction was not significantly associated with psychiatric symptoms. Implications of these findings for better understanding the association between social support and recovery are discussed...
Challenging two mental illness stigmas: personal responsibility and dangerousnessPatrick W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Schizophr Bull 28:293-309. 2002..Results also showed that subjects who had contact with persons with serious mental illness experienced greater changes than subjects in the education or control groups did on measures of attribution and helping behavior...
Towards an integrated, structural model of psychiatric rehabilitationPatrick W Corrigan
University of Chicago, Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Psychiatr Rehabil J 26:346-58. 2003..The paper also includes a brief discussion of the two-factor model...
Demonstrating translational research for mental health services: an example from stigma researchPatrick W Corrigan
Department of Psychiatry, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60477, USA
Ment Health Serv Res 5:79-88. 2003..We end the paper with a discussion of the implications of this research approach for the very practical issues of trying to change mental illness stigma...
Structural levels of mental illness stigma and discriminationPatrick W Corrigan
Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation at Evanston Northwestern Healthcare, 1033 University Place, Suite 450, Evanston IL 60201, USA
Schizophr Bull 30:481-91. 2004..Then we discuss the implications of structural models for advancing our understanding of mental illness stigma, including the methodological challenges posed by this paradigm...
An attribution model of public discrimination towards persons with mental illnessPatrick Corrigan
University of Chicago, Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, 7230 Arbor Drive, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
J Health Soc Behav 44:162-79. 2003..The results from this study also suggest that familiarity with mental illness reduces discriminatory responses...
Perceptions of discrimination among persons with serious mental illnessPatrick Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, Illinois, 60477, USA
Psychiatr Serv 54:1105-10. 2003....
From whence comes mental illness stigma?Patrick W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, IL 60477, USA
Int J Soc Psychiatry 49:142-57. 2003..Implications of this model for stigma change are discussed...
The effects of atypical antipsychotic medications on psychosocial outcomesPatrick W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, 7230 Arbor Drive, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Schizophr Res 63:97-101. 2003..This review provides evidence that some atypical antipsychotics may have direct effects on some of the psychosocial disabilities that result from serious mental illness...
What works for mental health system change: evolution or revolution?Patrick W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Adm Policy Ment Health 30:379-95. 2003..Clearly, all stakeholder groups need to become strategic about system change so that real-world practices keep up with the ideals emerging in practice guidelines and evidence-based practice reviews...
At issue: Stop the stigma: call mental illness a brain diseasePatrick W Corrigan
Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation at Evanston Northwestern Healthcare, 1033 University Place, Suite 450, Evanston, IL 60201, USA
Schizophr Bull 30:477-9. 2004..We propose a balanced approach that combats the various myths about mental illness with factual information...
Religion and spirituality in the lives of people with serious mental illnessPatrick Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Community Ment Health J 39:487-99. 2003..Implications of these findings for enhancing the lives of people with psychiatric disability are discussed...
Place first, then train: an alternative to the medical model of psychiatric rehabilitationPatrick W Corrigan
Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Northwestern University, USA
Soc Work 50:31-9. 2005..This article compares the two models and shows that place-train approaches can help people with serious mental illness attain many of their work and housing goals without increasing the frequency of relapse...
Stigmatizing attitudes about mental illness and allocation of resources to mental health servicesPatrick W Corrigan
University of Chicago Centre for Psychiatric, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Community Ment Health J 40:297-307. 2004..Implications of these findings on strategies that seek to increase resources for mental health programs are discussed...
Implications of educating the public on mental illness, violence, and stigmaPatrick W Corrigan
University of Chicago, 7230 Arbor Drive, Tinley Park, Illinois 60477, USA
Psychiatr Serv 55:577-80. 2004....
Motivational interviews as goal assessment for persons with psychiatric disabilityP W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, USA
Community Ment Health J 37:113-22. 2001..The basic mechanisms for understanding and implementing motivational interviews are summarized. Ways to circumvent barriers to motivational interviews are also discussed...
Some recovery processes in mutual-help groups for persons with mental illness; I: qualitative analysis of program materials and testimoniesPatrick W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Community Ment Health J 38:287-301. 2002..Analysis of the personal testimonies also showed accepting one's personal value as an important element in the GROW program...
Empowerment and serious mental illness: treatment partnerships and community opportunitiesPatrick W Corrigan
University of Chicago, Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, 7230 Arbor Drive, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Psychiatr Q 73:217-28. 2002....
Strategies for disseminating evidence-based practices to staff who treat people with serious mental illnessP W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Psychiatr Serv 52:1598-606. 2001..Research on dissemination is relatively new and is less well developed than the clinical and services research enterprise that has led to evidence-based practices. Implications for future studies are discussed...
Three strategies for changing attributions about severe mental illnessP W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Schizophr Bull 27:187-95. 2001..Protest yielded no significant changes in attributions about any group. This study also examined the effects of these strategies on processing information about mental illness...
What mental health teams want in their leadersP W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Adm Policy Ment Health 26:111-23. 1998..Additional analyses suggest Bass' Multifactor Model offers a useful paradigm for developing a curriculum specific to the needs of mental health team leaders...
The construct validity of empowerment among consumers of mental health servicesP W Corrigan
University of Chicago, Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Schizophr Res 38:77-84. 1999..Community orientation was correlated with self-esteem, resources, verbal intelligence, and ethnicity. The implications of these findings for a model of consumer empowerment are discussed...
Solutions to discrimination in work and housing identified by people with mental illnessPatrick W Corrigan
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, USA
J Nerv Ment Dis 194:716-8. 2006..Insight was significantly associated with number of endorsed solutions, while the interaction between insight and empowerment described a nonsignificant trend. Implications of these findings for stigma change are discussed...
Ingroup perception and responses to stigma among persons with mental illnessN Rusch
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL 60616, USA
Acta Psychiatr Scand 120:320-8. 2009....
Recovery as a psychological constructP W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Community Ment Health J 35:231-9. 1999..It was inversely associated with psychiatric symptoms and age. Implications of these findings for a psychological model of recovery are discussed...
Lessons from social psychology on discrediting psychiatric stigmaP W Corrigan
Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, University of Chicago, USA
Am Psychol 54:765-76. 1999..Future directions for research and practice to reduce stigma toward persons with severe mental illness are discussed...
DSM-V and the stigma of mental illnessDror Ben-Zeev
Institute of Psychology, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois 60616, USA
J Ment Health 19:318-27. 2010..Initial draft revisions recently proposed by the DSM-V work groups are presented, and their possible future implications for stigma associated with mental illness are discussed...
Will filmed presentations of education and contact diminish mental illness stigma?Patrick W Corrigan
Institute of Psychology, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL 60616, USA
Community Ment Health J 43:171-81. 2007..Contact effects were evident at post-test and 1 week follow-up. Implications of these findings for future research are discussed...
Transformational and transactional leadership skills for mental health teamsP W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Community Ment Health J 35:301-12. 1999..Transactional leadership skills include goal-setting, feedback, and reinforcement strategies which help team members maintain effective programs...
Building teams and programs for effective rehabilitationP W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Psychiatr Q 69:193-209. 1998..Outcome studies completed on IST are summarized in light of these problems. The paper ends with a consideration of some future directions for research in this area...
Factors that affect social cue recognition in schizophreniaP W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Psychiatry Res 78:189-96. 1998..False positives were greater for items rated as more abstract. Implications for understanding the social cognitive deficits of persons with schizophrenia are discussed...
Payeeship, financial leverage, and the client-provider relationshipBeth Angell
School of Social Service Administration, University of Chicago, 969 E 60th St, Chicago, IL 60637, USA
Psychiatr Serv 58:365-72. 2007..This study examined the effects of payeeship and perceived financial leverage on positive and negative dimensions of the client-provider relationship...
Target-specific stigma change: a strategy for impacting mental illness stigmaPatrick W Corrigan
Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60203, USA
Psychiatr Rehabil J 28:113-21. 2004..Stigma change is most effective when it includes all the components that describe how a specific power group impacts people with mental illness...
Disability and work-related attitudes in employers from Beijing, Chicago, and Hong KongPatrick W Corrigan
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois 60616, USA
Int J Rehabil Res 31:347-50. 2008..No clear pattern by city emerged for accommodations. Reasons why this pattern of attitudes emerged are discussed. Implications of these findings for attitude change are also considered...
Transformational leadership and the mental health teamPatrick W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Adm Policy Ment Health 30:97-108. 2002..These findings are helpful for understanding the central role of leaders in the organizational structure of teams...
Staff burnout and patient satisfaction: evidence of relationships at the care unit levelAndrew N Garman
Department of Health Systems Management, Rush University, Chicago, Illinois 60612, USA
J Occup Health Psychol 7:235-41. 2002..Multilevel analyses (hierarchical linear modeling) confirmed the existence of a meaningful team-level burnout construct. Team-level analyses revealed significant relationships between team burnout and patient satisfaction...
Illness management and recovery: a review of the researchKim T Mueser
Department of Psychiatry, Dartmouth Medical School and the New Hampshire-Dartmouth Psychiatric Research Center, Concord, New Hampshire 03301, USA
Psychiatr Serv 53:1272-84. 2002..The authors discuss the implementation and dissemination of illness management programs from the perspectives of mental health administrators, program directors, people with a psychiatric illness, and family members...
Police officers' attitudes toward and decisions about persons with mental illnessAmy C Watson
Department of Psychiatry, University of Chicago, 7230 Arbor Drive, Tinley Park, Illinois 60477, USA
Psychiatr Serv 55:49-53. 2004..A significant portion of police work involves contact with persons who have mental illness. This study examined how knowledge that a person has a mental illness influences police officers' perceptions, attitudes, and responses...
Behavior therapy empowers persons with severe mental illnessP W Corrigan
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
Behav Modif 21:45-61. 1997....
Changing stigmatizing perceptions and recollections about mental illness: the effects of NAMI's in Our Own VoicePatrick W Corrigan
Institute of Psychology, Illinois Institute of Technology, 3424 S State Street, Chicago, IL 60616, USA
Community Ment Health J 46:517-22. 2010..Results showed the two IOOV conditions had significantly better ratios than education. These findings suggest the 30 min version of IOOV is as effective as the 90 min standard...
The stigma of psychiatric disorders and the gender, ethnicity, and education of the perceiverPatrick W Corrigan
Joint Research Programs in Psychiatric Rehabilitation at Illinois Institute of Technology, 3424 S State Street, Chicago, IL 60616, USA
Community Ment Health J 43:439-58. 2007..Implications of these findings for better understanding the stigma of mental illness, and the development of anti-stigma programs, are reviewed...
Implicit self-stigma in people with mental illnessNICOLAS RUSCH
Joint Research Programs in Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL, USA
J Nerv Ment Dis 198:150-3. 2010..Our results suggest that implicit self-stigma is a measurable construct and is associated with negative outcomes. Attempts to reduce self-stigma should take implicit processes into account...
Psychotherapy for self-stigma among rural clientsJonathon E Larson
Illinois Institute of Technology, 3424 S State, First Floor, Room 1B9 2, Chicago, IL 60616, USA
J Clin Psychol 66:524-36. 2010..We review treatment principles and empirical research on psychotherapy for self-stigma rural settings. We finish with a case illustration of cognitive therapy with a rural client suffering from self-stigma...
Police responses to persons with mental illness: does the label matter?Amy C Watson
Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA
J Am Acad Psychiatry Law 32:378-85. 2004..The effects of officer characteristics and perceptions of the subject on responses to the vignettes were also examined. Findings suggest several directions for training and future research...
Age analysis of newspaper coverage of mental illnessNatalie B Slopen
The University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation Chicago, Illinois, USA
J Health Commun 12:3-15. 2007....
Some recovery processes in mutual-help groups for persons with mental illness; II: qualitative analysis of participant interviewsPatrick W Corrigan
Evanston Northwestern Healthcare Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, University of Chicago, 1033 University Place, Evanston, IL 60201, USA
Community Ment Health J 41:721-35. 2005..The paper ends with a discussion of the implications of these findings for the ongoing development of consumer operated services and their impact on recovery...
A stress-coping model of mental illness stigma: I. Predictors of cognitive stress appraisalNICOLAS RUSCH
Joint Research Programs in Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Illinois Institute of Technology, 3424 S State Street, Chicago, IL 60616, USA
Schizophr Res 110:59-64. 2009....
Impact of consumer-operated services on empowerment and recovery of people with psychiatric disabilitiesPatrick W Corrigan
Joint Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Illinois Institute of Technology, 3424 South State Street, Chicago, IL 60616, USA
Psychiatr Serv 57:1493-6. 2006..In this study, the cross-sectional relationship between participation in consumer-operated services and measures of recovery and empowerment is examined...
The educational goals of people with psychiatric disabilitiesPatrick W Corrigan
Institute of Psychology, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL 60616, USA
Psychiatr Rehabil J 32:67-70. 2008..Many people with psychiatric disability have educational goals. In this paper, we survey a sample to describe the frequency of academic interests, specific goals related to this interest, and barriers that undermine education...
Self-stigma, group identification, perceived legitimacy of discrimination and mental health service useNICOLAS RUSCH
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL, USA
Br J Psychiatry 195:551-2. 2009..More self-stigma predicted psychiatric hospitalisation. Cognitive indicators of stigma resilience may predict out-patient service use, whereas self-stigma may increase the risk of psychiatric hospitalisation...
Newspaper stories as measures of structural stigmaPatrick W Corrigan
Evanston Northwestern Healthcare, 1033 University Place, Evanston, IL 60201, USA
Psychiatr Serv 56:551-6. 2005..This study examined current trends in the news media on reporting topics of mental illness...
Automatically activated shame reactions and perceived legitimacy of discrimination: A longitudinal study among people with mental illnessNICOLAS RUSCH
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, USA
J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry 41:60-3. 2010..Automatically activated shame reactions may increase vulnerability to mental illness stigma...
Mental illness stigma and care seekingAmy E Cooper
University of Chicago Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, 7230 Arbor Drive, Tinley Park, IL 60477, USA
J Nerv Ment Dis 191:339-41. 2003
Biogenetic models of psychopathology, implicit guilt, and mental illness stigmaNICOLAS RUSCH
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Psychiatry Res 179:328-32. 2010..An exclusive focus on genetic models may therefore be problematic for clinical practice and anti-stigma initiatives...
Changing middle schoolers' attitudes about mental illness through educationAmy C Watson
Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation at Evanston Northwestern Healthcare, 1033 University Place, Suite 450, Evanston, IL 60201, USA
Schizophr Bull 30:563-72. 2004..These findings suggest that a brief educational program can be an effective intervention to increase knowledge and improve attitudes about mental illness...
What lessons do coming out as gay men or lesbians have for people stigmatized by mental illness?Patrick W Corrigan
Illinois Institute of Technology, 3424 S State Street, Chicago, IL 60616, USA
Community Ment Health J 45:366-74. 2009..We then postulated how these consequences might manifest themselves in the disclosure process of people with serious mental illnesses. Finally, implications for stigma management and change were considered...
A stress-coping model of mental illness stigma: II. Emotional stress responses, coping behavior and outcomeNICOLAS RUSCH
Joint Research Programs in Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Illinois Institute of Technology, 3424 S State Street, Chicago, IL 60616, USA
Schizophr Res 110:65-71. 2009..Emotional stress reactions and dysfunctional coping could be useful targets for interventions aiming to reduce the negative impact of stigma on people with mental illness...
Blame, shame, and contamination: the impact of mental illness and drug dependence stigma on family membersPatrick W Corrigan
Institute of Psychology, Illinois Institute of Technology, 3424 South Slate Street, Chicago, IL 60616, USA
J Fam Psychol 20:239-46. 2006..Family stigma related to drug dependence, however, is worse than for other health conditions, with family members being blamed for both the onset and offset of a relative's disorder and likely to be socially shunned...
Structural stigma in state legislationPatrick W Corrigan
Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation at Evanston Northwestern Healthcare, 1033 University Place, Suite 440, Evanston, IL 60201, USA
Psychiatr Serv 56:557-63. 2005..This article discusses examples of structural stigma that results from state governments' enactment of laws that diminish the opportunities of people with mental illness...
Examining the factor structure of the recovery assessment scalePatrick W Corrigan
Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation at Evanston Northwestern Healthcare, 1033 University Place, Ste 450, Evanston, IL 60201, USA
Schizophr Bull 30:1035-41. 2004..We compared these findings with those of other studies to summarize the factor structure that currently emerges on recovery...
How adolescents perceive the stigma of mental illness and alcohol abusePatrick W Corrigan
Evanston Northwestern Healthcare, 1033 University Place, Evanston, IL 60201, USA
Psychiatr Serv 56:544-50. 2005..Third, familiarity with people with mental illness tends to diminish stigma. This study attempted to validate these findings with a large and diverse sample of adolescents...
Recovery from schizophrenia and the role of evidence-based psychosocial interventionsPatrick W Corrigan
Illinois Institute of Technology, Joint Research Programs in Psychiatric Rehabilitation, 3424 S State Street, Chicago, IL 60616, USA
Expert Rev Neurother 6:993-1004. 2006..Effective interventions are those that are evidence based and include, illness management, supported employment, assertive community treatment, services to families and dually diagnosed services...
When do older adults seek primary care services for depression?Patrick W Corrigan
Department of Psychiatry, University of Chicago, Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Chicago Illinois 60477, USA
J Nerv Ment Dis 191:619-22. 2003
Findings from the National Comorbidity Survey on the frequency of violent behavior in individuals with psychiatric disordersPatrick W Corrigan
Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation at Evanston Northwestern Healthcare, 1033 University Place, Suite 450, Evanston, IL 60201, USA
Psychiatry Res 136:153-62. 2005....
Recovery in schizophrenia: reality or mere sloganNatalie B Slopen
Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Evanston Northwestern Healthcare, Evanston, IL 60201, USA
Curr Psychiatry Rep 7:316-20. 2005..In the future, researchers should try to reconcile process and outcome perspectives of recovery, and advocate for recovery-oriented services for individuals with schizophrenia...
Does social cognition influence the relation between neurocognitive deficits and vocational functioning in schizophrenia?Roland Vauth
Kantonsspital Basel, Psychiatrische Universitäts Poliklinik Psychiatric Outpatient Department, University Hospital of Basel, Petersgraben 4, CH 4031 Basel, Switzerland
Psychiatry Res 128:155-65. 2004..Nevertheless, an overwhelming proportion of social cognition (83%) could be explained by nonsocial cognition...
[The stigma of mental illness: concepts, forms, and consequences]NICOLAS RUSCH
Abteilung Psychiatrie und Psychotherapie, Universitat Freiburg
Psychiatr Prax 32:221-32. 2005..Persons with mental illness frequently encounter public stigma and may suffer from self-stigma. We aim to clarify the concept of mental illness stigma and discuss important consequences for people with mental illness...
Cognitive strategies versus self-management skills as adjunct to vocational rehabilitationRoland Vauth
Research Group of Cognitive Behavioral Intervention for Schizophrenia, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Hospital of Freiburg, Germany
Schizophr Bull 31:55-66. 2005..TSSN's efficacy was less clear; reasons for this uncertainty are provided...
Don't call me nuts: an international perspective on the stigma of mental illnessPatrick W Corrigan
Acta Psychiatr Scand 109:403-4. 2004
Mental illness stigma: concepts, consequences, and initiatives to reduce stigmaNICOLAS RUSCH
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Freiburg, Hauptstrasse 5, D 79104 Freiburg, Germany
Eur Psychiatry 20:529-39. 2005..Well-designed anti-stigma initiatives will help to diminish negative consequences of mental illness stigma...
Understanding adherence to neuroleptic treatment in schizophreniaíRoland Vauth
Department of Psychiatric Outpatient Treatment Psychiatrische Universitätspoliklinik, University Hospital of Basel, Claragraben 95, CH 4005 Basel, Switzerland
Psychiatry Res 126:43-9. 2004..Verbal memory and cognitive flexibility were found to be associated with influence of others. Possible consequences for designing compliance enhancing therapeutic interventions are discussed...
Understanding and influencing the stigma of mental illnessPatrick W Corrigan
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago 60616, USA
J Psychosoc Nurs Ment Health Serv 46:42-8. 2008..Stigma change for label avoidance is not as well understood but may include the education and contact approaches used for public stigma. Evidence-based approaches to stigma change need to be substantiated by rigorous investigations...
Mental illness stigma in the Israeli context: deliberations and suggestionsAmir Tal
Department of Community Mental Health, Faculty of Social Welfare and Health Sciences, University of Haifa, Mount Carmel, Israel
Int J Soc Psychiatry 53:547-63. 2007..In this paper we deliberate mental illness stigma in the Israeli context and suggest ways to reduce it, emphasizing the community's role in the rehabilitation of persons with mental illness...
How children stigmatize people with mental illnessPatrick W Corrigan
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago 60616, USA
Int J Soc Psychiatry 53:526-46. 2007..Implications for continued research in this area are highlighted throughout the article...
Self-stigma in women with borderline personality disorder and women with social phobiaNICOLAS RUSCH
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Freiburg, Germany
J Nerv Ment Dis 194:766-73. 2006..This may reflect intense labeling processes as being mentally ill due to repeated hospitalizations, frequent interpersonal difficulties, and visible scars...
Self-efficacy and empowerment as outcomes of self-stigmatizing and coping in schizophreniaRoland Vauth
Psychiatrische Poliklinik, Universitätsspital Basel Psychiatric Outpatient Department, University Hospital Basel, Petersgraben 4, CH 4031 Basel, Switzerland
Psychiatry Res 150:71-80. 2007..These data have implications for cognitive behavioral approaches, which should focus on anticipated stigma to improve recovery in schizophrenia...
Psychosocial treatment compliance scale for people with psychotic disordersHector W H Tsang
Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hunghom, Hong Kong
Aust N Z J Psychiatry 40:561-9. 2006..This study developed a scale to measure psychosocial treatment compliance of people with psychotic disorders and established its psychometric properties...
The effects of stereotype suppression on psychiatric stigmaDavid L Penn
Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, Davie Hall, CB 3270, 27599 3270, USA
Schizophr Res 55:269-76. 2002..Implications of the findings for reducing psychiatric stigma are discussed...
A cross-cultural study of employers' concerns about hiring people with psychotic disorder: implications for recoveryHector W H Tsang
Dept of Rehabilitation Sciences, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hung Hom, Hong Kong
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 42:723-33. 2007..In this study, we tested this lay approach by comparing employers' concerns about hiring people with psychotic disorder for entry-level jobs in US and China...
Self-stigma, empowerment, and perceived legitimacy of discrimination among women with mental illnessNICOLAS RUSCH
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Freiburg, Germany
Psychiatr Serv 57:399-402. 2006..The authors hypothesized that a high level of perceived discrimination, little sense of identification with the group of people with mental illness, and a high level of perceived legitimacy of discrimination lead to self-stigma...
Mental illness stigma: problem of public health or social justice?Patrick W Corrigan
Joint Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago 60616, USA
Soc Work 50:363-8. 2005
Measuring self-stigma of mental illness in China and its implications for recoveryKelvin M T Fung
Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hunghom
Int J Soc Psychiatry 53:408-18. 2007..The results also suggest that stigma played a detrimental role in undermining self-esteem, self-efficacy and psychosocial treatment compliance. Implications for recovery of mental health consumers are discussed...
How clinical diagnosis might exacerbate the stigma of mental illnessPatrick W Corrigan
Institute of Psychology, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago 60616, USA
Soc Work 52:31-9. 2007..Dimensional approaches to diagnosis may not augment stigma in the same manner as classification. Moreover, regular interaction with people with mental illness and focusing on recovery may diminish the stigmatizing effects of diagnosis...
The impact of posttraumatic stress disorder on dysfunctional implicit and explicit emotions among women with borderline personality disorderNICOLAS RUSCH
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
J Nerv Ment Dis 195:537-9. 2007..Self-reported guilt proneness and implicit anxiety may mediate the negative impact of comorbid PTSD on women with BPD...
Evidence-based practices need to beware of expertsPatrick W Corrigan
Psychiatr Serv 53:1031-2. 2002
Motivational interviewing to improve insight and treatment adherence in schizophreniaNICOLAS RUSCH
Department of Psychiatry, University of Freiburg, Germany
Psychiatr Rehabil J 26:23-32. 2002..Motivational Interviewing can, with specific modifications for persons with schizophrenia, successfully increase their insight and compliance, because it allows them to explore their own goals and to take a more active role in treatment...
Familiarity with mental illness and social distance from people with schizophrenia and major depression: testing a model using data from a representative population surveyMatthias C Angermeyer
Department of Psychiatry, University of Leipzig, Germany
Schizophr Res 69:175-82. 2004..CONCLUSIONS: Our findings fully support the notion that approaches to social change which increase the public's familiarity with mental illness will decrease stigma...
Language and stigmaPatrick W Corrigan
Psychiatr Serv 57:1218; author reply 1218. 2006
