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ARTICLES: Technology and Psychiatric Disorders

Predictors of Self-Stigma in Schizophrenia: New Insights Using Mobile Technologies

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Pages 305-314 | Published online: 08 Nov 2012
 

Abstract

Objective: Self-stigma has significant negative impact on the recovery of individuals with severe mental illness, but its varying course is not well understood. Individual levels of self-stigma may vary over time and fluctuate in response to both external/contextual (i.e., location, activity, social company) and internal (i.e., psychiatric symptoms, mood) factors. The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between self-stigmatizing beliefs and these factors, as they occur in the daily life of individuals with schizophrenia. Methods: Mobile technologies were used to longitudinally track momentary levels of self-stigma, psychotic symptoms, negative affect, positive affect, activity, and immediate social and physical environment in 24 individuals with schizophrenia, multiple times daily, over a 1-week period. Results: Multilevel modeling showed that participants’ current activity was associated with changes in self-stigma (χ 2 = 10.53, p < .05), but immediate location and social company were not. Time-lagged analyses found that increases in negative affect (β = 0.11, p < .01) and psychotic symptom severity (β = .16, p < .01) predicted increases in the intensity of self-stigmatizing beliefs. Psychotic symptoms were found to be both an antecedent and a consequence (β = 0.08, p < .01) of increased self-stigma. Conclusions: Our findings support a framework for understanding self-stigma as an experience that changes based on alterations in internal states and external circumstances. Mobile technologies are an effective methodology to study self-stigma and have potential to be used to deliver clinical interventions.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This study was supported by funding provided by the National Center on Adherence and Self Determination (National Institute of Mental Health DCISR MH08598-01).

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