TY - JOUR
T1 - Experience of stigmatization in children receiving inpatient and outpatient mental health treatment
T2 - a longitudinal study
AU - Kaushik, Anya
AU - Papachristou, Efstathios
AU - Telesia, Laurence
AU - Dima, Danai
AU - Fewings, Sandra
AU - Kostaki, Evgenia
AU - Gaete, Jorge
AU - Ploubidis, George B
AU - Kyriakopoulos, Marinos
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported by a Maudsley Charity grant to Dr. Marinos Kyriakopoulos.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s).
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Mental health-related stigma is poorly understood, and minimal research has focused on the experience of stigma from children's perspectives. We sought to investigate whether children treated as inpatients and outpatients had different experiences of stigma over time and whether stigma is linked to global functioning cross-sectionally and longitudinally. Children, aged 8-12 years, receiving treatment within a national specialist mental health inpatient unit were matched for age, gender and diagnosis with children receiving outpatient treatment (N = 64). Validated measures of stigma, global functioning and symptom severity were collected at the start of treatment and upon discharge from the ward for inpatients, and a similar timeframe for their individually matched outpatients. Latent change score models and partial correlation coefficients were employed to test our hypotheses. No differences in most aspects of stigma between children treated as inpatients and outpatients were observed, except for personal rejection at baseline and self-stigma at follow-up favouring outpatients. A reduction in stigma was observed in societal devaluation, personal rejection and secrecy for inpatients, and self-stigma and secrecy for outpatients between the two assessments. Societal devaluation declined at a higher rate among inpatients compared to outpatients, albeit reductions in stigma were comparable for all remaining measures. No association was found between the change in stigma and change in global functioning. Future research may offer further insights into the development and maintenance of stigma and identify key targets for anti-stigma interventions to reduce its long-term impact.
AB - Mental health-related stigma is poorly understood, and minimal research has focused on the experience of stigma from children's perspectives. We sought to investigate whether children treated as inpatients and outpatients had different experiences of stigma over time and whether stigma is linked to global functioning cross-sectionally and longitudinally. Children, aged 8-12 years, receiving treatment within a national specialist mental health inpatient unit were matched for age, gender and diagnosis with children receiving outpatient treatment (N = 64). Validated measures of stigma, global functioning and symptom severity were collected at the start of treatment and upon discharge from the ward for inpatients, and a similar timeframe for their individually matched outpatients. Latent change score models and partial correlation coefficients were employed to test our hypotheses. No differences in most aspects of stigma between children treated as inpatients and outpatients were observed, except for personal rejection at baseline and self-stigma at follow-up favouring outpatients. A reduction in stigma was observed in societal devaluation, personal rejection and secrecy for inpatients, and self-stigma and secrecy for outpatients between the two assessments. Societal devaluation declined at a higher rate among inpatients compared to outpatients, albeit reductions in stigma were comparable for all remaining measures. No association was found between the change in stigma and change in global functioning. Future research may offer further insights into the development and maintenance of stigma and identify key targets for anti-stigma interventions to reduce its long-term impact.
KW - Children
KW - Global functioning
KW - Inpatient
KW - Mental health treatment
KW - Outpatient
KW - Stigma
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85118674058&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/4400a9b0-ad48-30ea-a813-60c28990ff7c/
U2 - 10.1007/s00787-021-01904-5
DO - 10.1007/s00787-021-01904-5
M3 - Article
C2 - 34751811
SN - 1018-8827
JO - European Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
JF - European Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
ER -