Abstract
Background: Stigmatisation is of increasing importance in relation to racism, ageism and sexism but also as an impediment to treating patients. Aims: To develop a theoretical foundation to help comprehend the core meaning of stigmatisation and to guide practical anti-stigmatisation measures. Method: Personal reflection; re-interpretation of stigmatisation and reformulation of the relevant concepts. Results: Emergence of a unitary theory of stigmatisation. Conclusions: Based on the structure of stigmatisation one could explore six levels of intervention in anti-stigmatisation campaigns: the cognitive level educational intervention; the affective level - psychological intervention; the discrimination level - legislative intervention; the denial level -linguistic intervention; the economic origin political intervention; the evolutionary origin - intellectual and cultural intervention. As destigmatisation has to challenge fundamental human tendencies, anti-stigmatisation campaigns have to be continuous, non-stop, open-ended projects aiming at keeping alive thought processes that moderate and humanise the pursuit of self-interest and the urge to survive in a competitive world.
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CITATION STYLE
Haghighat, R. (2001). A unitary theory of stigmatisation. Pursuit of self-interest and routes to destigmatisation. British Journal of Psychiatry. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.178.3.207
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