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Gender,status, and psychiatric labels
Institution:1. Department of Psychiatry II, University of Ulm and BKH Günzburg, Germany;2. Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, Zürich University Hospital of Psychiatry, Switzerland;3. Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, USA;4. Institute of Epidemiology and Medical Biometry, University of Ulm, Germany;5. Hospital of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Zürich, Switzerland;6. Institute of Psychiatry, Laboratory of Neuroscience, LIM27, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
Abstract:We examine a key modified labeling theory proposition—that a psychiatric label increases vulnerability to competence-based criticism and rejection—within task- and collectively oriented dyads comprised of same-sex individuals with equivalent education. Drawing on empirical work that approximates these conditions, we expect the proposition to hold only among men. We also expect education, operationalized with college class standing, to moderate the effects of gender by reducing men’s and increasing women’s criticism and rejection. But, we also expect the effect of education to weaken when men work with a psychiatric patient. As predicted, men reject suggestions from teammates with a psychiatric history more frequently than they reject suggestions from other teammates, while women’s resistance to influence is unaffected by their teammate’s psychiatric status. Men also rate psychiatric patient teammates as less powerful but no lower in status than other teammates, while women’s teammate assessments are unaffected by their teammate’s psychiatric status. Also as predicted, education reduces men’s resistance to influence when their teammate has no psychiatric history. Education also increases men’s ratings of their teammate’s power, as predicted, but has no effect on women’s resistance to influence or teammate ratings. We discuss the implications of these findings for the modified labeling theory of mental illness and status characteristics theory.
Keywords:Education  Gender  Modified labeling theory  Status  Stigma
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