Erschienen in:
01.05.2014 | Original Paper
Genetic attributions and mental illness diagnosis: effects on perceptions of danger, social distance, and real helping decisions
verfasst von:
Aaron A. Lee, Sean M. Laurent, Thomas L. Wykes, Katherine A. Kitchen Andren, Katelynn A. Bourassa, Christine L. McKibbin
Erschienen in:
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology
|
Ausgabe 5/2014
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Abstract
Genetic essentialism suggests that beliefs in genetic causes of mental illness will inflate a desire for social distance from affected individuals, regardless of specific disorder. However, genetic contingency theory predicts that genetic attributions will lead to an increased desire for social distance only from persons with disorders who are perceived as dangerous.
Purpose
To assess the interactive effect of diagnosis and attribution on social distance and actual helping decisions across disorders.
Methods
Undergraduate students (n = 149) were randomly assigned to read one of the six vignettes depicting a person affected by one of the three disorders (i.e., schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or major depression) with either a genetic or environmental causal attribution for disorder. Participants completed measures of perceived dangerousness, social distance, empathic concern, familiarity with mental illness, and actual helping decisions.
Results
When provided with genetic attributions, participants’ desire for social distance was greater for targets with schizophrenia relative to targets with depression or bipolar disorder. This effect was mediated by perceived dangerousness. The indirect effect of diagnosis on helping decisions, through social distance, was significant within the genetic attribution condition.
Conclusion
Consistent with genetic contingency theory, genetic attributions for schizophrenia, but not affective disorders, lead to greater desire for social distance via greater perceived dangerousness. Further, results suggest that genetic attributions decrease the likelihood of helping people with schizophrenia, but have no effect on the likelihood of helping people with affective disorders. These effects are partially accounted for by desired social distance from people with schizophrenia.