分析媒体对物质使用障碍和成瘾者的描述:范围审查。

Cultures of science.. Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-21 DOI:10.1177/20966083241313264
Kristin Taylor Bosworth, Zachary B Massey, MaCee Boyle, Nicole Henry, Katherine G McGough, Alyssa Ashford, Ella B Rains, Jessica D Battle, Paris Kelly, Pias Malaker, Alyssa Shell Tilhou
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对物质使用障碍(sud)的污名化是治疗和护理的障碍。媒体对sud的描述影响公众对sud患者的看法,并构成社会意见和观点的基础。因此,评估媒体如何描绘sud是至关重要的。本文探讨了大众媒体如何描绘患有sud的个人以及这些描绘如何强化负面刻板印象。它还评估了媒体描绘的影响和肤色与这些描绘的交集。此外,本文提倡采取传播策略,旨在消除sud的污名,以加强公众教育并鼓励寻求治疗的行为。我们使用了范围审查方法,在PubMed中搜索医学主题标题(MeSH)术语“(成瘾)和(写照)”(n=58)和“(成瘾)和(写照)和(媒体)”(n=37)。搜索产生了58篇独特的同行评议文章(删除重复;n = 37)。其中,有42篇文章不符合我们的主题标准,剩下16篇文章有待分析。对16篇文章进行归纳主题编码,发现了8个描述主题:(1)积极认可(n=8, 50.0%)、(2)暴力或危险(n=7, 43.8%)、(3)犯罪(n=6, 37.5%)、(4)危险行为(n=6, 37.5%)、(5)政策制定(n=5, 31.3%)、(6)不可靠、不稳定或不可控(n=3, 18.8%)、(7)干预或治疗(n=3, 18.8%)、(8)名人(n=3, 18.8%)。这些主题在四种媒体中被观察到:娱乐媒体(n=9)、社交媒体(n=1)、新闻媒体(n=7)和营销媒体(n=5)。研究结果表明,媒体对sud患者的描述继续强化了负面的刻板印象。通过对成瘾相关话题进行反污名化的交流来对抗这种描述的有效运动需要作为伙伴的患者、成瘾科学专家和科学传播者之间的合作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Analysing media portrayals of people with substance use disorder and addiction: A scoping review.

Stigma about substance use disorders (SUDs) is a barrier to treatment and care. Media portrayals of SUDs influence public perceptions of people with SUDs and form the foundation for societal opinions and perspectives. For this reason, it is crucial to evaluate how the media portrays SUDs. This paper examines how the mass media portrays individuals with SUDs and how these portrayals reinforce negative stereotypes. It also evaluates the influence of media portrayals and the intersection of skin colour with these depictions. Additionally, this paper advocates for communication strategies that aim to destigmatize SUDs to enhance public education and encourage treatment-seeking behaviour. We used a scoping review approach, searching PubMed for medical subject heading (MeSH) terms '(addiction) and (portrayal)' (n=58) and '(addiction) and (portrayal) and (media)' (n=37). The search yielded 58 unique peer-reviewed articles (duplicates removed; n=37). Of these, 42 did not meet our topic criteria, leaving 16 articles for analysis. Inductive thematic coding was performed on the 16 articles and uncovered eight portrayal themes: (1) positive endorsement (n=8, 50.0%), (2) violent or dangerous (n=7, 43.8%), (3) criminal (n=6, 37.5%), (4) risky behaviours (n=6, 37.5%), (5) policy-making (n=5, 31.3%), (6) unreliable, unstable or uncontrollable (n=3, 18.8%), (7) interventions or treatments (n=3, 18.8%), and (8) celebrity (n=3, 18.8%). These themes were observed in four types of media: entertainment media (n=9), social media (n=1), news media (n=7) and marketing media (n=5). The findings show that media portrayals of individuals with SUDs continue to reinforce negative stereotypes. Effective campaigns to counter this portrayal with anti-stigmatizing communication of addiction-related topics require collaboration between patients as partners, experts in addiction science and science communicators.

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