Publication | Closed Access
What's in a label? The effects of substance types and labels on treatment considerations and stigma.
118
Citations
22
References
1993
Year
StigmatizationSubstance UseMental HealthDrug TreatmentScience Center ReadPsychologySubstance Use RecoveryTobacco ControlLikely OutcomeSubstance Use TreatmentPublic HealthSubstance TypesTreatment ConsiderationsHealth SciencesSocial StigmaBehavioral SciencesAddiction TreatmentMental Health StigmaSide EffectSubstance AbuseAddictionStigma StudiesHypothetical Substance AbuserSubstance AddictionPsychopathology
Visitors (N = 579) to a science center read selected scenarios and evaluated the most likely outcome for a hypothetical substance abuser. Respondents were randomly assigned to one of six scenario conditions: a person with one of three different substance abuse problems (alcohol, tobacco, or cocaine) was crossed with two labels reflecting high or low substance dependence. Results indicated that: (1) cigarettes were viewed as a less serious substance abuse problem than were alcohol or cocaine (a person who smoked cigarettes was rated as more likely to recover from his problem, self-change was regarded as more appropriate and less stigma was associated with smoking than with the other two drugs); (2) non-abstinent recoveries of all types were greeted with skepticism; and (3) recovery was rated as more likely to occur from treatment than from self-change.
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