2017
DOI: 10.1177/0020764017719303
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Mental health literacy, stigma and perception of causation of mental illness among Chinese people in Taiwan

Abstract: This study underlines the need for public education programmes to improve knowledge of various mental illnesses and to reduce stigmatising attitudes among Taiwanese Chinese. The aforementioned socially and culturally driven beliefs must be taken into consideration so that culturally relevant education programmes can be developed.

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Cited by 39 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…21 This subsequently affects an individual's attitude and willingness to seek counseling or therapy. [22][23][24] An estimated 29.2% of the Malaysian population suffer from a mental disorder, 24 and 11.0% of adolescents reported severe depression. 25 However, there is a low rate for helpseeking for mental illness, and psychiatric disorders are treated at a late stage.…”
Section: What Are Your Research's Implications Toward Theory Practicmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…21 This subsequently affects an individual's attitude and willingness to seek counseling or therapy. [22][23][24] An estimated 29.2% of the Malaysian population suffer from a mental disorder, 24 and 11.0% of adolescents reported severe depression. 25 However, there is a low rate for helpseeking for mental illness, and psychiatric disorders are treated at a late stage.…”
Section: What Are Your Research's Implications Toward Theory Practicmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Depression is associated with functional impairment, risk of dementia, and increased mortality 2 . With insufficient knowledge and stigmatizing attitudes toward depression among Taiwanese people 3 , the situation regarding undiagnosed cases may be worse than that in other countries. In addition, approximately 50% of patients with depression drop out of the treatment before receiving the antidepressant therapy of 6–9 months that is recommended in Taiwan 4 , which will increase the risk of recurrence.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Stigma is referred to as a social construct comprised of 4 interrelated components including: 1) people distinguish and label human differences as a knowledge problem; 2) labeled people are caused damage by negative stereotypes as a attitude problem; 3) labeled people are placed in exclusion and 4) labeled people have a lost status and are discriminated against in terms of behavior problems (Svensson & Hansson, 2016) (Reavley, Morgan, & Jorm, 2017). A stigmatized attitude was related to the mental disorder itself (Zhuang, Wong, Cheng, & Pan, 2017). The stigma of mental health has a detrimental effect because the sufferers tend to be hesitant to reveal a psychiatric diagnosis, meaning that there is a decrease in mental health-seeking behavior and decreased medication adherence, which potentially worsens the disease prognosis (Ndetei et al, 2016) (Subica et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%