Resisting stigma and evaluating realism in a direct-to-consumer advertisement for psychiatric drugs

IF 1.2 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Tara G. Walker
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Purpose This study aims to examine how experience with mental illness influences perceptions of stigma and realism in a specific direct-to-consumer advertisement (DTCA) for bipolar depression. Design/methodology/approach An online survey had participants watch a 90 s advertisement for a prescription bipolar depression drug and then answer 24 questions about stigma, mental illness experience and the realism of the portrayals in the advertisement. Findings Findings show that people who identify as having experience with mental illness tend to see the ad as more stigmatizing and less realistic. Additionally, people who expressed more stigmatizing beliefs also tended to see more stigma present in the ad. Finally, the study reconfirms conclusions of previous research that people who have experience with mental health conditions possess fewer stigmatizing beliefs overall regarding mental illness. Research limitations/implications The sample population, while diverse in age and somewhat diverse in location, were highly educated, suggesting that they were not representative of the general population. Future studies may want to use more representative samples. A more nuanced approach to understanding experience is needed. While the sample in this study was purposively derived from communities with a higher rate of mental illness, a comprehensive experience scale to measure degrees of experience with mental illness would enhance understanding of this construct. Researchers may also want to look more deeply into the emotional responses of consumers who view these ads. To develop a greater understanding of the trajectory of DTCA, studies of online advertising for psychiatric drugs are needed. Practical implications The results of the study suggest that respondents with experience with mental illness may find ads that sell psychiatric medications unrealistic. This study presents the topic of realism in DTCA as an important construct for determining how consumers may perceive portrayals of disorders. Social implications The fact that people who have experience with mental illness found the Latuda ad to be generally unrealistic suggests that DTCA may be failing to represent mental illness in a way that demonstrates care for patients. Additionally, this research confirms that people who have had exposure to and experience with mental illness tend to hold less stigmatizing beliefs, (Link and Cullen, 1986; Corrigan et al., 2001; Angermeyer et al., 2004) a finding which supports the continuing project of increasing mental health literacy and awareness in the general population. Originality/value This study investigates the reactions of people who identify as having some experience with mental illness to see if they accept the portrayals of mental illness in DTCA or resist them by challenging their realism or identifying stigmatizing elements.
在精神病药物的直接面向消费者的广告中抵制污名和评价现实主义
目的本研究旨在探讨精神疾病的经历如何影响双相情感障碍的特定直接面向消费者广告(DTCA)中的耻辱感和现实感。设计/方法/方法一项在线调查让参与者观看了90 s的处方双相情感障碍药物广告,然后回答24个关于污名、精神疾病经历和广告中人物形象的真实性的问题。调查结果显示,那些认为自己有精神疾病经历的人往往认为这则广告更具污名化,更不现实。此外,表达更多污名化信念的人也倾向于在广告中看到更多的污名化。最后,该研究再次证实了先前研究的结论,即有心理健康状况经历的人对精神疾病的污名性信念总体上较少。研究局限性/含义样本人群虽然年龄不同,地点也有所不同,但受过高等教育,这表明他们不能代表普通人群。未来的研究可能希望使用更具代表性的样本。需要一种更细致的方法来理解经验。虽然这项研究中的样本来自精神疾病发生率较高的社区,但衡量精神疾病经历程度的综合经验量表将增强对这一结构的理解。研究人员可能还想更深入地研究观看这些广告的消费者的情绪反应。为了更好地了解DTCA的发展轨迹,需要对精神药物的在线广告进行研究。实际含义研究结果表明,有精神疾病经历的受访者可能会发现销售精神药物的广告不切实际。这项研究提出了DTCA中的现实主义主题,作为确定消费者如何感知疾病描述的一个重要结构。社会影响有精神疾病经历的人发现Latuda广告通常是不切实际的,这表明DTCA可能未能以一种展示对患者关怀的方式来代表精神疾病。此外,这项研究证实,接触过和经历过精神疾病的人往往持有较少的污名化信念(Link和Cullen,1986;Corrigan等人,2001年;Angermeyer等人,2004年),这一发现支持了提高普通人群心理健康素养和意识的持续项目。独创性/价值这项研究调查了那些认为自己有精神疾病经历的人的反应,看看他们是否接受DTCA中对精神疾病的描述,或者通过挑战他们的现实主义或识别污名化元素来抵制他们。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
8.30%
发文量
21
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