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Psychiatric Services | 2013

Public Stigma Associated With Psychosis Risk Syndrome in a College Population: Implications for Peer Intervention

Lawrence H. Yang; Deidre M. Anglin; Ahtoy J. Wonpat-Borja; Mark Opler; Michelle Greenspoon; Cheryl Corcoran

OBJECTIVES This study compared stigma associated with the psychosis risk label and diagnostic labels for nonpsychotic and psychotic mental disorders among young adult peers. METHODS Urban college respondents (N=153) read an experimental vignette describing a young adult experiencing prodromal symptoms who was randomly assigned a diagnostic label (major depression, generalized anxiety disorder, schizophrenia, or psychosis risk with and without accurate information about the psychosis risk label) and answered questions about stigma toward the individual in the vignette. RESULTS Compared with labels for nonpsychotic disorders, schizophrenia elicited more negative stereotyping and the at-risk label invoked greater social distance and less willingness to help. Any increased social distance appeared to be reduced by accurate information about the at-risk state. No differences in stigma were found for the psychosis risk and schizophrenia labels. CONCLUSIONS The psychosis risk label alone appeared to evoke greater status loss and discrimination. Accurate information may minimize some stigmatizing attitudes among college peers.


Transcultural Psychiatry | 2014

A brief anti-stigma intervention for Chinese immigrant caregivers of individuals with psychosis: Adaptation and initial findings

Lawrence H. Yang; Grace Ying-Chi Lai; Ming Tu; Maggie Luo; Ahtoy J. Wonpat-Borja; Valerie W. Jackson; Roberto Lewis-Fernández; Lisa B. Dixon

Mental illness stigma has adverse effects on both the caregivers’ psychological well-being and the effectiveness of care that consumers receive. While anti-stigma interventions for family caregivers from Western settings have recently shown efficacy, these interventions may not be equally applicable across culturally diverse groups. Specifically, Chinese immigrant caregivers experience heightened internalized stigma, which predisposes the adoption of harmful coping strategies and reduced quality of social networks. We present an anti-stigma intervention based on a peer-family group format, co-led by a clinician and a trained family caregiver, to counter stigma among Chinese immigrants. Data are presented from a brief intervention administered to a pilot sample of 11 Chinese immigrant caregivers that provides: psychoeducation, strategies to counter experienced discrimination, and techniques to resist internalized stigma. Case vignettes illustrate implementation of this intervention, and how the peer-family format via interactive contact counteracts internalized stereotypes, encourages adaptive coping strategies, and reinvigorates social networks. Quantitative results further suggest preliminary efficacy in reducing internalized stigma for caregivers who evidenced at least some prior internalized stigma. This study constitutes an initial but important step towards reducing mental illness stigma among Asian Americans, for whom stigma has played a powerful role in the delay and underuse of treatment.


Community Mental Health Journal | 2012

Causal Beliefs and Effects upon Mental Illness Identification Among Chinese Immigrant Relatives of Individuals with Psychosis

Lawrence H. Yang; Ahtoy J. Wonpat-Borja

Identifying factors that facilitate treatment for psychotic disorders among Chinese-immigrants is crucial due to delayed treatment use. Identifying causal beliefs held by relatives that might predict identification of ‘mental illness’ as opposed to other ‘indigenous labels’ may promote more effective mental health service use. We examine what effects beliefs of ‘physical causes’ and other non-biomedical causal beliefs (‘general social causes’, and ‘indigenous Chinese beliefs’ or culture-specific epistemologies of illness) might have on mental illness identification. Forty-nine relatives of Chinese-immigrant consumers with psychosis were sampled. Higher endorsement of ‘physical causes’ was associated with mental illness labeling. However among the non-biomedical causal beliefs, ‘general social causes’ demonstrated no relationship with mental illness identification, while endorsement of ‘indigenous Chinese beliefs’ showed a negative relationship. Effective treatment- and community-based psychoeducation, in addition to emphasizing biomedical models, might integrate indigenous Chinese epistemologies of illness to facilitate rapid identification of psychotic disorders and promote treatment use.


Schizophrenia Research | 2010

Potential stigma associated with inclusion of the psychosis risk syndrome in the DSM-V: An empirical question

Lawrence H. Yang; Ahtoy J. Wonpat-Borja; Mark Opler; Cheryl Corcoran


Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology | 2012

Effects of labeling and interpersonal contact upon attitudes towards schizophrenia: implications for reducing mental illness stigma in urban China

Lawrence H. Yang; Graciete Lo; Ahtoy J. Wonpat-Borja; Daisy R. Singla; Bruce G. Link; Michael R. Phillips


Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology | 2012

Eugenics, genetics, and mental illness stigma in Chinese Americans

Ahtoy J. Wonpat-Borja; Lawrence H. Yang; Bruce G. Link; Jo C. Phelan


Archive | 2006

Psychopathology among Asian-Americans

Larry Yang; Ahtoy J. Wonpat-Borja


Schizophrenia Research | 2015

Stigma related to labels and symptoms in individuals at clinical high-risk for psychosis.

Lawrence H. Yang; Bruce G. Link; Shelly Ben-David; Kelly E. Gill; Ragy R. Girgis; Gary Brucato; Ahtoy J. Wonpat-Borja; Cheryl Corcoran


Journal of Community Psychology | 2016

attitudes toward judicial lenience and government assistance for individuals with mental illness: A comparison of Chinese and European Americans

Debbie Huang; Lawrence H. Yang; Ahtoy J. Wonpat-Borja; Jonathan Lam; Bruce G. Link; Jo C. Phelan


Archive | 2013

PublicStigmaAssociatedWithPsychosis RiskSyndromeinaCollegePopulation: ImplicationsforPeerIntervention

Lawrence H. Yang; Deidre M. Anglin; Ahtoy J. Wonpat-Borja; Mark Opler; Michelle Greenspoon; M. Corcoran

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