Strategies to Reduce Mental Illness Stigma: Perspectives of People with Lived Experience and Caregivers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Raising Mental Health Awareness
3.1.1. Target Groups/Setting and Methods
You all have to do a lot of campaigns, running it tends to stick in their minds (Male, 37 years, Psychosis-related disorder, PWLE FGD 5)
Educating the public because it is very important. More on media because there are many people on the internet or computer, TV and all sorts ah, newspaper of course, articles, so that more people will come to know so that lesser, I mean to accept slowly. The stigma will grow weaker and weaker, not that strong. (Female, 65 years, Caregiver FGD 3)
I think drama is not a good way to go to raise awareness of mental illness because in drama, it’s drama what. You have to be dramatic, and you have to be dramatic you have to sensationalise. But maybe talk shows are better. Talk show where they invite celebrities together with professionals and then they talk it out. (Male, 28 years, Psychosis-related disorder, PWLE FGD 5)
Education from, it’s ok for those who are already old enough like us, we can’t like, some people we can’t really unlearn what we learn so we have to teach the new generation and input in what are the more important things, like for example, the major concerns as of now and like how important is mental health so that they won’t grow up to be like their parents or like whoever. So, I think it starts from the younger ones la they will receive fresh information and they won’t have any judgement against us (Female, 22 years, Mood disorder, PWLE FGD 2)
I think it should start across Singapore, like for example, starting from schools, starting from workplaces, meeting the employers you know, the teachers, the, the facilitators, starting from there you know. So, when you have that well-established, designed activities you know, I mean the initiative, we have that initiative to go to, to the schools you know, at a younger age when they already start to understand, so when they come to work, as an maybe an employer, so they can understand further what happens to the subordinates, what happens to the employees who have mental illness. (Female, 48 years, Caregiver FGD 5)
Essentially run multiple small campaigns across companies so we start from the top tier and then you go down to the middle tier and then into the SME like a small, very small enterprises and things like that to do awareness campaign with all their HR [Human Resource], their ops [operations] department and things like that so that they learn. So at least if the managers learn, hopefully they’ll pass that on, not always. It will not always happen, but it might you know, so at least there’s a trickle-down effect and it last longer (Male, 28 years, Mood disorder, PWLE FGD 6)
I think the Singapore government is very effective, and they are respectable, so Ministry of Health or IMH organize talk to the employers, to the unions, trade unions. (Male, 64 years, Caregiver FGD 5)
3.1.2. Types of Content
Get the MP [member of parliament] come and talk, share with them, share with the population, mental illness is common. Especially depression, 1 in 5, in the population will get depression, or even now, now 1 in 4. (Male, 64 years, Caregiver FGD 5)
To me education is the best way to, to erase all these myths (Male, 49 years, Psychosis-related disorder, PWLE FGD 4)
Let them know, no big deal. It is just like any other chronic illness. I say in your whole lifetime anyone can suffer some from of mental illness. (Female, 65 years, Caregiver FGD 3)
You don’t want to reduce stigma so much to the point when somebody likes oh I like to put my water bottle on the right side, oh I’m OCD. You know. Or like oh I had a negative thought that came in, oh I have schizophrenia. You don’t want people to like over-normalise it, cause that does happen in these days. Like when just somebody likes to be neat, they consider themselves OCD. Yeah, it’s so frustrating. The definition of mental illness is it’s supposed to disrupt your natural life. If it doesn’t disrupt your life in any way, it’s not supposed to be considered a mental illness. So, when people are like oh I’m very OCD, or like oh I have depression. Yeah, everybody has depression. (Female, 23 years, Psychosis related disorder, PWLE FGD 5)
You shouldn’t get them to sympathize with you, more like to understand them. Rather than like say that okay you must be careful of this people, you must just give them information you know (Male, 24 years, Mood disorder, PWLE FGD 6)
We would educate them on how to less stigma, how to know about our condition, then how to actually support us in the recovery process (Female, 34 years, Psychosis-related disorder, PWLE- FGD 4)
3.2. Social Contact
3.2.1. Celebrity Disclosures
I think it’s good if you can get someone, well known in Singapore, to share about their family members having mental illness or they themselves having mental illness. (Female, 51 years, Caregiver FGD 5)
In Singapore, there is a podcast. That is actually supposed to be a comedy podcast, but every now and then it gets a bit real. And they talk about themselves. So, I think, I don’t know if you guys know Nathan Hartono? He runs a podcast with his friend named Jon Kensey who’s also based in Singapore. He’s Filipino but he’s based in Singapore. He does comedy shows, he does, he’s a comedian. He does all these funny little things but every now and then when we write in, and we are allowed to write in to them it’ll just be like an idea of what would you suggest if we are going through this thing. So, he actually openly talks about his depression. So, he’ll share experiences, he’ll share what he would do, he would make things very clear that it’s not supposedly the only way or the best way to do things but that’s how he would have done it. Yeah, and the thing these little things help knowing that even people who are supposedly seen on a higher pedestal is also facing the same things as you are. Yeah, really changes a lot (Male, 23 years, Mood disorder, PWLE FGD 1)
3.2.2. Sharing Inspirational Recovery Stories
I remember that time I was watching the news about lady, she suffered from mental illness but she… she see doctors, follows up regularly, she is recovered in that sense. She secured a job as a lecturer in one of the local polytechnic. She wrote a book. She was very frank with her employer, that was good, and they accept her as she is but she still go back to the hospital like every several months for follow-up and stuff like that. So I find that very enlightening. That there is such people who actually like make good head way in their life despite having mental illness. So I think if you can find more of such people and interview them highlight to the public that is actually… we can also be successful in their own way, it will be good. (Female, 44 years, Psychosis-related disorder, PWLE FGD 3)
3.2.3. Opportunities for Social Contact
(Another participant: Education is important) And exposure, I think. Because education is like you are telling people you know? But I think exposure for them to experience it, interaction with people with mental illness. It really speaks more than words. How they… because people always have this misconception ‘oh ok, mental illness, violence, negative, crazy, talking to yourself…’ But in fact, in fact most mental patients are not like that, they don’t behave that way. (Female, 39 years, Caregiver FGD 1)
I would emphasize priorities on interaction between the regular population and those with illness. To let them realize there’s no big difference. (Male, 24 years, Mood disorder, PWLE FGD 6)
3.3. Advocacy by Influential Figures or Groups
Because like even in my head, the assumption is it’ll probably come from IMH. Which to me is not the most effective method of campaigning because then everybody would be like, yeah they would do this, of course they would do this. So, I think, no. (Male, 23 years, Mood disorder, PWLE FGD 1)
To be effective it has to be nationwide, government-led initiative. It cannot be a little bit here and there, by IMH or by Caregiver Alliance, it doesn’t really work. It has to be nationwide and it has to have the support of the government. First, they have the resources and as what (another FGD participant) said uh, they can be very effective if they are very serious in wanting this campaign to be successful, they can do it. (Female, 51 years, Caregiver FGD 5)
3.4. Legislation of Anti-Discriminatory Laws
3.4.1. Removal of Declaration of Mental Illness in Job Application and Scholarship Forms
Now we talk about the functional ability of a mental illness person, we talk about work. When you work, you need to fill in a lot of forms. There are a lot of things that…why must there be a declaration by the organisation? Why? Why? That is not good, that is not fair. In school, in army or in certain big organisation, there is always a declare, “Are you mentally ill? Do you have a mental problem?” Why is that in the form? It should be out. (Male, 62 years, Caregiver FGD 1)
I hope like whenever you’re applying for a job then you do not need to tick off the, “Do you have a mental illness?” that... that column. But maybe being open about it and talk about it would make the person understand in your shoes (Female, 25 years, Mood disorder, PWLE FGD 6)
3.4.2. Policies That Encourage Employers to Hire and Support PWLE in Workplaces
The government could perhaps encourage their employers to take on mental patients who are willing to disclose their conditions of their job contracts. I stay in (name of a sheltered home) and the practice of their employment specialist is to have a very honest declaration. Just help… just say we have, this person who is going to help work has a mental condition. So they say that is why I follow them because they do it on a clean cut basis but I feel very upset because I follow suit, I declare my condition, and I loss so many chances of being employed. So government can do, I think government has yet to, have a lot to do. (Female, 55 years, Psychosis-related disorder, PWLE FGD 3)
In line with my unemployment, no money, and at the same time, I feel like I can contribute la to the greater society, ah you know what I’m saying? So that maybe in the future, people will say okay never mind you can work but then like you know, every year got psychiatric evaluation you know that’s even better, you know. A company that’s accepting of your condition. (Male, 24 years, Mood disorder, PWLE FGD 6)
Maybe you can suggest to MOM [Ministry of Manpower] to remove the questions about health conditions. Have some regulations or advice to employers about how they can react to people who declare or maybe even take it out from the application form. For example, in the US [United States], you’re not actually, it’s kind of discriminatory, you’re not allowed to. It’s against the law to discriminate people based on their orientation or whatever, their conditions. So maybe in Singapore, we can move ahead in that regard. (Male, 28 years, -Psychosis-related disorder, PWLE FGD 5)
4. Discussion
“It’s moving, it’s slow…but it is gaining momentum…This is the best time for the mentally ill. People are more able to speak up for themselves even as patients and that is a wonderful thing”.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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PWLE | Caregiver | |
---|---|---|
Mean (Range) | Mean (Range) | |
Age (years) | 33.4 (21–58) | 53.5 (22–73) |
N = 42 | N = 31 | |
Sex | ||
Male | 18 | 10 |
Female | 24 | 21 |
Highest Completed Education # | ||
Secondary education and below | 7 | 9 |
Vocational certification/Diploma/Pre-U | 26 | 14 |
University degree and above | 8 | 8 |
Ethnicity | ||
Chinese | 27 | 21 |
Malay | 10 | 4 |
Indian | 4 | 5 |
Others | 1 | 1 |
Illness type | ||
Mood | 18 | |
Psychosis | 24 | |
Relationship with care recipient | ||
Spouse | 2 | |
Parent | 15 | |
Child | 8 | |
Sibling | 4 | |
Others | 2 |
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Shahwan, S.; Goh, C.M.J.; Tan, G.T.H.; Ong, W.J.; Chong, S.A.; Subramaniam, M. Strategies to Reduce Mental Illness Stigma: Perspectives of People with Lived Experience and Caregivers. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 1632. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031632
Shahwan S, Goh CMJ, Tan GTH, Ong WJ, Chong SA, Subramaniam M. Strategies to Reduce Mental Illness Stigma: Perspectives of People with Lived Experience and Caregivers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(3):1632. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031632
Chicago/Turabian StyleShahwan, Shazana, Chong Min Janrius Goh, Gregory Tee Hng Tan, Wei Jie Ong, Siow Ann Chong, and Mythily Subramaniam. 2022. "Strategies to Reduce Mental Illness Stigma: Perspectives of People with Lived Experience and Caregivers" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 3: 1632. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031632
APA StyleShahwan, S., Goh, C. M. J., Tan, G. T. H., Ong, W. J., Chong, S. A., & Subramaniam, M. (2022). Strategies to Reduce Mental Illness Stigma: Perspectives of People with Lived Experience and Caregivers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(3), 1632. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031632