Abuse of women with disabilities is a significant societal problem of which practitioners, service providers, and other professionals must be aware, respond to, and work to alleviate. Practitioners in most settings will encounter client systems impacted by disability, and many of their clients may be victims of abuse. Primary objectives of this paper are (1) to summarize issues and problems relevant to abuse of women with disabilities (2) to describe some of the empowering, proactive attitudes and behaviors of victim-survivors and their support networks, and (3) to further emphasize the need for practitioners to give primacy to helping such clients empower themselves to (re)take and maintain charge of their lives.
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to obtain perceptions of educated non‐professionals towards people with schizophrenia.Design/methodology/approachA social distance scale and a schizophrenia knowledge and attitude survey were administered to 330 undergraduates. It was predicted that knowledge and personal family experience would predict tolerance attitudes and social distance comfort towards persons with schizophrenia.FindingsKnowledge about schizophrenia and personal family experience with mental illness had similar effects on tolerance scores. Specifically, those with higher knowledge and family members with schizophrenia reported higher levels of tolerance (i.e. less stigma). Conversely, participants with a family member diagnosed with a mental illness reported less social distance comfort to persons with schizophrenia as opposed to those without mental illness in the family. Finally, gender differences indicated that women held more tolerant attitudes towards schizophrenia compared with men.Originality/valueFew studies have focused on educated non‐professional perceptions and attitudes towards the mentally ill.
This article presents some findings about adults with a psychotic disorder who were identified in the OPCS surveys of psychiatric morbidity. The main aim of the analysis was to identify characteristics associated with differences in the circumstances and health-related behaviour of adults aged 16-64 with psychosis. The analysis covers people who were identified by the various criteria used on the surveys as having a psychotic illness and who were considered to be living in private households. First we describe briefly the survey methods used and how diagnoses of psychosis were derived. We then present results from four topic areas covered in the analysis. These are: use of medication, use of health services, difficulties with activities of daily living, and social support.
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