Abstract
That the general public commonly holds negative attitudes and beliefs toward persons living with mental illness is well-documented (CitationCorrigan, Mueser, Bond, Drake, & Solomon, 2008; CitationRusch, Angermeyer, & Corrigan, 2005; CitationWahl, 1999). What is surprising is that some researchers have identified similar attitudes and beliefs held by mental health providers (CitationLauber, Anthony, Ajdacic-Gross, Rössler, 2004; CitationLauber, Nordt, Braunschweig, & Rössler, 2006; CitationNordt, Rössler, & Lauber, 2006). This less-understood phenomenon, provider stigma, is defined as the negative attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors that mental health providers possess and enact toward clients. The consequences of provider stigma are profound, yet efforts to address it must begin with intensive exploration of the concept and its experience. This article describes an ethnographic content analysis (ECA) of client- and family member–authored literature around the concept of provider stigma. The hope is that the outcome of analysis, a conceptual model involving five themes related to the lived experience of provider stigma, may be useful to social work practitioners, educators, and researchers: Sensitizing practitioners to actions and attitudes potentially perceived as less-than-helpful or harmful; to educators entrusted with preparing future mental health social workers; and for researchers further investigating the phenomenon, its consequences, measurement development, and intervention design.
Acknowledgments
Many thanks to my dissertation co-chair, Dr. Kia J. Bentley, for her unrelenting support and guidance, for supervising this project, and for reviewing the findings. Gratitude also to Drs. Jennifer Manuel and Joseph Walsh for providing constructive feedback.