Abstract

Recent research shows that the crucial factor determining the rejection of former mental patients is their behavior rather than their stigmantized status. The study reported here, based on a vignette experiment (with a design that varies patient status with the nature of behavior), challenges this conclusion. Like previous research, it indicates that a simple assessment of labelings shows little effect on a social distance scale. However, when a measure of perceived dangerousness of mental patients is introduced, strong labeling effects emerge. Specifically, the data reveal that the lable of "previous hospitalization" fosters high social distance among those who perceive mental patients to be dangerous and low social distance among those who do not see patients as a threat. It appears that past investigators have missed these effects because they have averaged excessively lenient responses with excessively rejecting ones. This suggests that labels play an important role in how former mental patients are perceived and that labeling theory should not be dismissed as a framework for understanding social factors in mental illness.

Keywords

VignetteSocial distanceMental illnessPsychologySocial psychologyScale (ratio)Mental healthPsychiatryMedicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)

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Publication Info

Year
1987
Type
article
Volume
92
Issue
6
Pages
1461-1500
Citations
1250
Access
Closed

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Bruce G. Link, Francis T. Cullen, James Frank et al. (1987). The Social Rejection of Former Mental Patients: Understanding Why Labels Matter. American Journal of Sociology , 92 (6) , 1461-1500. https://doi.org/10.1086/228672

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DOI
10.1086/228672