4.2 Article

Implications of addiction diagnosis and addiction beliefs for public stigma: A cross-national experimental study

期刊

DRUG AND ALCOHOL REVIEW
卷 40, 期 5, 页码 842-846

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/dar.13244

关键词

addiction; stigma; public stigma; brain disease; models of addiction

资金

  1. Network of European Funding for Neuroscience Research
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  3. Canada Research Chairs Program

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The study reveals that alcohol use disorders are more stigmatised compared to other health conditions, and beliefs about different etiological models of addiction may impact public stigma toward AOD disorders. Regional variability in these beliefs also exists, with beliefs in the moral model of addiction contributing to differences in public stigma between the USA and Canada.
Introduction Stigmatisation of alcohol and other drug (AOD) use disorders poses a significant barrier to treatment access. A review by the World Health Organization concluded that addictive disorders were the most stigmatised health condition. Few studies have examined whether different etiological models of addiction (MOA) have implications for public stigma toward AOD disorders. The current study examined whether beliefs representative of five MOA predict public stigma levels and whether stigma differs for AOD use disorders relative to other health conditions. Methods Survey data were collected from Canada, the USA and Australia using an online data collection platform. Participants were randomised to one of four vignette manipulations describing an individual with an alcohol use disorder and/or other disorder. Participants' stigma toward the vignette character and beliefs related to five MOA (disease, moral, psychological, sociological, nature) were measured. Results Stigma ratings were significantly higher in the alcohol use disorder condition compared to other conditions. Two MOA accounted for significant variance in stigma ratings, where greater beliefs in the nature and psychological MOA predicted significantly lower levels of stigma toward alcohol use disorder. Contrary to predictions, beliefs in the disease MOA did not relate to lower stigma. Lastly, beliefs in the moral MOA partly accounted for geographical region differences (the USA vs. Canada) in public stigma. Discussion and Conclusions The current study provides further experimental support that AOD disorders are more stigmatised than others. Additionally, the findings suggest that MOA may relate differentially to perceived stigma, and that regional variability in such beliefs exists.

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