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Journal Article

Citation

Wang K, Weiss NH, Pachankis JE, Link BG. Stigma Health 2016; 1(4): 252-262.

Affiliation

School of Public Policy, University of California, riverside.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, American Psychological Association)

DOI

10.1037/sah0000032

PMID

28090587

Abstract

Among people living with psychiatric disorders, mental illness stigma has been identified as a major barrier to recovery by contributing to low self-esteem and interfering with treatment-seeking. The present research examined the association between perceived mental illness stigma and suicide risk severity and considered the role of emotional clarity (i.e., the ability to identify and understand one's emotional experiences), a critical component of emotion regulation, as a moderator of this association. A sample of individuals who had experienced recent psychiatric hospitalizations (N = 184) completed self-report measures of perceived stigma associated with their psychiatric diagnoses, deficits in emotional clarity, and behaviors that have been found to confer risk for suicide. A moderation analysis revealed that perceived mental illness stigma was positively associated with suicide risk severity, but only for individuals who have greater deficits in emotional clarity. These findings highlight the role of emotional clarity as a resource for individuals coping with mental illness stigma and underscore the potential utility of targeting deficits in emotional clarity in prevention and intervention efforts for reducing suicide risk.


Language: en

Keywords

coping; emotion regulation; emotional clarity; mental illness stigma; suicide risk

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