UNMASKING STIGMA: PATIENT PERSPECTIVES ON LIVING WITH SCHIZOPHRENIA
Mental illnesses, particularly severe conditions like schizophrenia, are entwined with social stigma and self-stigmatization, significantly influencing an individual's social identity. Stigma and auto-stigmatization can deeply impact a patient's self-esteem, playing a pivotal role in their illness trajectory and the process of healing emotional and biographical wounds (Bay, 1991). In an era of profound individuation, where identity and self-integrity are under constant threat, addressing stigma becomes a critical element for an individual's life quality (Monaghan & Gates, 2015). The link between stigma, chronic illnesses, and their embodiment has been extensively studied, underscoring its central role in an increasingly individualistic society (Charmaz, 1983; Inman, 2019; Maffoni et al., 2017; Loco et al., 2009; Valasaki, 2021). The management of stigma isn't confined to a mere side issue in mental health; it's a pivotal aspect, warranting care and self-care. This is especially true in the context of evolving community psychiatry in Greece, where long-term institutionalization is no longer the primary treatment modality (Madianos, 2020; Moudatsou et al., 2021; Missouridou et al., 2022).
| Journal | Applied Psychology, Sociology, and Social Policy Journal |
| ISSN | 2998-8411 |
| Volume / Issue | Vol. 12, No. 4 (2024) |
| Pages | 17-33 |
| Published | 31 January 2025 |
| DOI | 10.5281/zenodo.14779161 |
| Access | Open Access |
| License | CC BY 4.0 — reuse with attribution |
| Publisher | Keith Publications |
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