"Mad, sick, head nuh good": mental illness stigma in Jamaican communities

scientific article published in April 2010

"Mad, sick, head nuh good": mental illness stigma in Jamaican communities is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1177/1363461510368912
P698PubMed publication ID20603388
P5875ResearchGate publication ID45094426

P2093author name stringRob Whitley
Carlotta M Arthur
Frederick W Hickling
Hilary Robertson-Hickling
Tammy Haynes-Robinson
Wendel Abel
P2860cites workPublic conceptions of mental illness: labels, causes, dangerousness, and social distanceQ22241453
Conceptualizing StigmaQ29040561
Revisiting the developed versus developing country distinction in course and outcome in schizophrenia: results from ISoS, the WHO collaborative followup project. International Study of SchizophreniaQ33925889
Stigmatization of severe mental illness in India: Against the simple industrialization hypothesisQ33984987
Community perception of mental disorders - a systematic review of Latin American and Caribbean studiesQ35975775
Measuring mental illness stigmaQ35999385
Mental illness stigma: concepts, consequences, and initiatives to reduce stigmaQ36261311
The relationship between mental illness severity and stigmaQ36381347
A cross-national study of the stigmatization of severe psychiatric illness: historical review, methodological considerations and development of the questionnaire.Q36852357
Open papers, open minds? Media representations of psychiatric de-institutionalization in JamaicaQ37035814
Using qualitative research to inform mental health policyQ37149233
Community reactions to mental disorders. A key informant study in three developing countriesQ39365375
Perception of stigma among family members of individuals with schizophrenia and major affective disorders in rural EthiopiaQ39581182
India mental health country profileQ39690791
Internalizing stigma associated with mental illness: findings from a general population survey in JamaicaQ39835822
Cultural and temporal variations in schizophrenia: a speculation on the importance of industrializationQ41050960
Solutions to discrimination in work and housing identified by people with mental illnessQ48431667
Fear of people with mental illnesses: the role of personal and impersonal contact and exposure to threat or harm.Q50999285
Challenging stigma and discrimination in communities: a focus group study identifying UK mental health service users' main campaign priorities.Q51927612
Stigmatizing attitudes about mental illness and allocation of resources to mental health services.Q51937020
Changes in attitudes towards mental illness following exposure.Q51939100
Naming the stars: Integrating qualitative methods into psychological researchQ59274738
P433issue2
P304page(s)252-275
P577publication date2010-04-01
P1433published inTranscultural PsychiatryQ7833943
P1476title"Mad, sick, head nuh good": mental illness stigma in Jamaican communities
P478volume47

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q50611852"Head take you": causal attributions of mental illness in Jamaica.
Q40877068Attitudes towards mental illness of nursing students in a Baccalaureate programme in Jamaica: a questionnaire survey.
Q37994173Belief in the dangerousness of people with mental disorders: a review
Q64905578Cultural Sensitivity and Global Pharmacy Engagement in the Caribbean: Dominica, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, and St. Kitts.
Q38154858Current research on transcultural psychiatry in the Anglophone Caribbean: epistemological, public policy, and epidemiological challenges
Q95819103Jamaican adolescents' receptiveness to digital mental health services: A cross-sectional survey from rural and urban communities
Q37454051Perceived barriers to accessing mental health services among black and minority ethnic (BME) communities: a qualitative study in Southeast England
Q51798704Psychiatrists' challenges in considering disclosure of schizophrenia diagnosis in Israel.
Q37517011Relationship of social and economic factors to mental disorders among population-based samples of Jamaicans and Guyanese
Q45310168Valuing psychiatric patients' stories: belief in and use of the supernatural in the Jamaican psychiatric setting

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