PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Substance-abuse stigma impedes treatment in various ways, scientists say

2023-12-15
(Press-News.org) Addiction is one of society’s most misunderstood and rebuked health conditions. That stigma discourages many people from seeking treatment for substance dependence, according to a new report published in Psychological Science in the Public Interest, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. 

Research on stigma toward people with substance use disorder (SUD) is relatively sparse, the report adds.

“Characterizing the nature and etiology of SUD stigma is critical for developing tailored and effective interventions to combat it,” wrote psychological scientist Anne C. Krendl and sociologist Brea L. Perry of Indiana University, Bloomington, in their review.

Substance dependence has become a national health threat. Drug overdose rates in the United States have climbed over the past 20 years, driven primarily by opioid and stimulant use. In a recent national survey, nearly 66 million Americans reported abusing alcohol over a 1-month period, and about 20 million reported using illegal narcotics and prescription drugs for nonmedical reasons.

Researchers measure stigma around both SUD and mental illness\ along three dimensions:

public stigma—society’s negative beliefs toward those who struggle with those disorders self-stigma—negative beliefs that the individuals hold toward themselves structural stigma—systemic rules, policies, and practices that discriminate against individuals with those disorders. Overall, stigma research has focused primarily on mental health problems, the authors wrote. But studies indicate that SUD is typically more stigmatized than mental illness, in part because substance use is viewed as more controllable. (Schizophrenia, however, elicits similar levels of stigma as does SUD, research shows.)

Experiments that have framed SUD as uncontrollable show some reduction in stigma, but that may have the unintended consequence of casting substance dependence as insurmountable, the authors wrote.

Studies of public stigma indicate that Americans express concerns about interacting with substance users, although that resistance ebbs toward individuals described as being in active recovery.  People with SUD may face housing discrimination, reduced employment opportunities, and lowered income.

Studies also show variability in stigma among different types of substance dependence. For example, individuals who abuse illegal drugs such as heroin are perceived as more dangerous than those who abuse alcohol or prescription opioids.

The consequences of public stigma, along with structural and self-stigma, discourage individuals with SUD from seeking and persisting with treatment, research suggests.

Some studies have identified strategies aimed at reducing stigma, such as education designed to counter inaccurate beliefs, but those approaches have shown limited progress. This calls for researchers to develop stronger methods for reducing stigma. Strategies may include emphasizing an individual’s recovery and the reduction of structural treatment barriers, such as inadequate insurance coverage and lack of access to evidence-based interventions.

In a commentary accompanying the report, APS James McKeen Cattell Fellow Stephen P. Hinshaw, a distinguished professor at University of California, Berkeley and University of California, San Francisco, points to successful treatments as possibly the “ultimate game-changer” in stigma reduction. Hinshaw, whose work focuses on developmental psychopathology and mental illness stigma, notes that HIV/AIDS received massive stigma before antiretroviral therapies transformed it from a terminal to survivable condition.

In another commentary, APS Fellow Kenneth J. Sher, a University of Missouri scholar renowned for his work on alcohol use disorder, calls for a more nuanced view of SUD stigma. Terms such as SUD are “grossly nonspecific” and may lead to a broadened array of stereotypes, Sher said. The U.S. National Institutes of Health has proposed developing alternatives to SUD-related terminology such as “addict” and “abuser,” but research should focus on the effects of that relabeling on stigma, he asserted. 

 

The Association for Psychological Science is the home of thousands of leading psychological science researchers, practitioners, teachers, and students from around the world. APS is dedicated to advancing scientific psychology across disciplinary and geographic borders and committed to disseminating psychological science to the public, incentivizing global collaboration among researchers, catalyzing the further development of psychological science, and promoting the application of psychological science to public policy.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Ultrafast lasers map electrons 'going ballistic' in graphene, with implications for next-gen electronic devices

Ultrafast lasers map electrons going ballistic in graphene, with implications for next-gen electronic devices
2023-12-15
LAWRENCE — Research appearing in ACS Nano, a premier journal on nanoscience and nanotechnology, reveals the ballistic movement of electrons in graphene in real time. The observations, made at the University of Kansas’ Ultrafast Laser Lab, could lead to breakthroughs in governing electrons in semiconductors, fundamental components in most information and energy technology. “Generally, electron movement is interrupted by collisions with other particles in solids,” said lead author Ryan Scott, ...

Revolutionizing forestry: 'CountShoots' unveils advanced UAV and AI techniques for precise slash pine shoot counting

Revolutionizing forestry: CountShoots unveils advanced UAV and AI techniques for precise slash pine shoot counting
2023-12-15
In southern China, the genetically improved slash pine (Pinus elliottii) plays a crucial role in timber and resin production, with new shoot density being a key growth trait. Current manual counting methods are inefficient and inaccurate. Emerging technologies such as UAV-based RGB imaging and deep learning (DL) offer promising solutions. However, DL methods face challenges in global feature capture, necessitating additional mechanisms. Innovations like the Vision Transformer and its derivatives (e.g., TransCrowd, CCTrans) show potential in plant trait counting, offering simplified and more effective approaches for large-scale and accurate ...

UMSOM researchers discover first ever link between hemoglobin-like protein and normal heart development

UMSOM researchers discover first ever link between hemoglobin-like protein and normal heart development
2023-12-15
BALTIMORE, December 14, 2023– In a landmark study led by the University of Maryland School of Medicine, researchers discovered for the first time that a certain kind of protein similar to hemoglobin, called cytoglobin, plays an important role in the development of the heart. Specifically, it affects the correct left-right pattern of the heart and other asymmetric organs. The findings, published today in the journal Nature Communications, could eventually lead to the development of new therapeutic interventions to alter the processes that lead ...

Facility fees charged by hospitals for colonoscopy procedures are about 55 percent higher than those charged by surgical centers

2023-12-15
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL FRIDAY DECEMBER 15 AT 11 A.M. EST. U.S. hospitals charge facility fees for colonoscopy procedures covered by private health insurance that are on average approximately 55 percent higher than facility fees billed by smaller clinics known as ambulatory surgical centers, according to a study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.  The findings appear in a peer-reviewed research letter to be published online December 15 in JAMA Health Forum. Colonoscopies ...

Racial equity in living donor kidney transplant centers

2023-12-15
About The Study: The results of this study of data on 57,000 adults who received living donor kidney transplants indicate that additional work is necessary to identify transplant program and center-level strategies to improve racial equity in access to living donor kidney transplant.  Authors: Lisa M. McElroy, M.D., M.S., of the Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, North Carolina, is the corresponding author.  To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/  (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.47826) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, ...

Well-being parameters and intention to leave current institution among academic physicians

2023-12-15
About The Study: In this study of 18,000 academic physicians, approximately one-third reported moderate or greater intention to leave within two years. Burnout, lack of professional fulfillment, and other well-being factors were associated with intention to leave, suggesting the need for a comprehensive approach to reduce physician turnover.  Authors: Mickey T. Trockel, M.D., Ph.D., of the Stanford University School of Medicine in Stanford, California, is the corresponding author.  To access the embargoed study: Visit ...

Menu labeling and calories purchased in restaurants in a national fast food chain

2023-12-15
About The Study: Fewer calories were purchased in restaurants with calorie labels compared with those with no labels, suggesting that consumers are sensitive to calorie information on menu boards, according to the results of this study of 2,329 Mexican-inspired fast food restaurants in six U.S. locations. Associations differed by location.  Authors: Brian Elbel, Ph.D., M.P.H., of the New York University School of Medicine in New York, is the corresponding author.  To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/  (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.46851) Editor’s ...

Development of deep ensembles to screen for autism and symptom severity using retinal photographs

2023-12-15
About The Study: The findings of this diagnostic study of 1,890 eyes of 958 participants support the potential of artificial intelligence as an objective tool in screening for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and possibly for symptom severity using retinal photographs. Retinal photograph use may speed the ASD screening process, which may help improve accessibility to specialized child psychiatry assessments currently strained by limited resources.  Authors: Yu Rang Park, Ph.D., and Keun-Ah Cheon, M.D., Ph.D., ...

Positive tipping points must be triggered to solve climate crisis

2023-12-15
Positive tipping points must be triggered if we are to avoid the severe consequences of damaging Earth system tipping points, researchers say. With global warming on course to breach 1.5oC, at least five Earth system tipping points are likely to be triggered – and more could follow. Once triggered, Earth system tipping points would have profound local and global impacts, including sea-level rise from major ice sheet melting, mass species extinction from dieback of the Amazon rainforest and disruption to weather patterns from a collapse of large-scale ocean circulation currents. The new commentary – published in One Earth by researchers from the Global Systems Institute at ...

Guiding principles to address bias in healthcare algorithms

2023-12-15
A paper published today in JAMA Network Open addresses bias in healthcare algorithms and provides the healthcare community with guiding principles to avoid repeating errors that have tainted the use of algorithms in other sectors. This work, conducted by a technical expert panel co-chaired by Marshall Chin, MD, MPH, the Richard Parrillo Family Distinguished Service Professor of Healthcare Ethics at the University of Chicago, supports the Biden Administration Executive Order 14091, Further Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through The Federal Government, issued on February 16, 2023. President Biden calls for Federal ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Macronutrient and micronutrient intake among US women ages 20 to 44

Payments by drug and medical device manufacturers to us peer reviewers of major medical journals

One-third of cancer-related crowdfunding campaigns share medical financial hardship and health-related social needs, new research shows

Faulty 'fight or flight' response drives deadly C. difficile infections, research reveals

Checking out the boundaries: Milestone in lipidomics achieved

SNU-KAIST researchers jointly develop a new visible light communication encryption technology using chiral nanoparticles

HPTN 091 study shows encouraging uptake and adherence to oral PrEP among transgender women

Gonzalez receives award to study causes of racial disparities in amputation rates in Indiana

Mount Sinai opens state-of-the-art center for patients with complex conditions including Lyme disease and long COVID

$14M NIH grant funds gene-editing research for rare metabolic diseases at Penn and CHOP

One experiment: The brain’s landscapers

AI-supported dermatology: Now for darker skin tones too, thanks to a new data set

Understanding how smiling influences relationship building during real-life conversations

British Heart Foundation Data Science Centre launches first open challenge to explore AI ECG potential

Heart failure, atrial fibrillation & coronary heart disease linked to cognitive impairment

To make children better fact-checkers, expose them to more misinformation — with oversight

Renowned psychiatrist professor Celso Arango advocates for primary prevention in mental health

Ketamine pioneer Dr. Carlos A. Zarate Jr. reshapes depression treatment landscape

Glowing approach could aid carpal tunnel-related surgery

The hidden costs of free apps – more than personal data

Hot dragonfly summer: species with darker wings have evolved to withstand heat and attract partners

Development of a new electrolyte synthesis method for next-generation fuel cells: a step closer to green hydrogen production

Rage clicks: Study shows how political outrage fuels social media engagement

E-waste experts urge public: Stop trashing electronic products with ordinary garbage (International E-Waste Day)

Hospitals that are understaffed for infection prevention and control have higher rates of infection, study says

Study reveals 85% of women prefer choice between self-sampling and traditional cervical screening

Global advances and future trends in cervical cancer research from 2013 to 2022

Inspired by Spider-Man, a lab recreates web-slinging technology

Applied Microbiology International’s 2024 Honorary Fellowship goes to Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu

Pitt scientists validate new lab test platform for blood biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease

[Press-News.org] Substance-abuse stigma impedes treatment in various ways, scientists say