Both the Time to Change programme against stigma and discrimination and its evaluation are focused on the right goal - population-level changes in knowledge, attitudes and behaviours in the general public and in key groups of interest such as employers, mental health professionals and people in treatment for mental illnesses. Reference Henderson and Thornicroft1 The goal is enormously ambitious and extraordinarily difficult to tightly evaluate - but it is the right goal.
Cultural context of mental illness
The aspects of knowledge, attitudes and behaviours that Time to Change seeks to alter form what we have called a ‘cultural context’. Reference Link, Angermeyer, Phelan, Thornicroft, Szmukler, Mueser and Drake2 In a very deep sense cultural conceptions become the way all of us have of thinking about the issue. They constitute what the general public and key interests groups think about what mental illness is, what people with mental illness are like, what causes mental illnesses, what should be done when a person develops a mental illness, how much social distance should be kept from someone with a mental illness, and what the preferred policies to address the problem of mental illness are. As a context, these cultural conceptions become an external reality - something that individuals must take into account when they make decisions and enact behaviours. The idea is that individuals (e.g. people with mental illnesses, caregivers, employers, policy makers) know about cultural conceptions and shape their behaviours to some significant degree to take account of those conceptions no matter what their own knowledge, attitudes and beliefs happen to be.
Impact of cultural context
For people who develop a mental illness negative cultural conceptions can be poignantly self-relevant, as they may be induced to ask whether and to what extent ‘others will look down on me, reject me, simply because I have been identified as having a mental illness’. Then, if an expectation of rejection becomes a part of a person's worldview, that perception can have serious negative consequences. Expecting and fearing rejection, people who have been hospitalised for mental illness may act less confidently and more defensively, or they may simply avoid a potentially threatening contact altogether. Reference Link, Cullen, Struening, Shrout and Dohrenwend3
Cultural conceptions are also salient for mental health policy makers. For example, as treatment providers and policy makers make decisions about where to locate a new board and care home for people with serious mental illness, they are likely to include in their considerations the expected response of the neighbourhoods they imagine placing the facility in. Processes such as these have resulted in a clustering of board and care facilities in neighbourhoods that do not have the clout to exclude such facilities, thereby creating what have been called ‘psychiatric ghettos’. Reference Arboleda-Florez4
Finally, imagine for example that, unlike all other illnesses, insurance policies for heart disease (instead of mental illnesses) were capped at lower levels of compensation and included higher co-pays, as mental illnesses currently are in the USA. Reference Glied and Frank5 Despite the fact that a rationale could be conjured for such a policy, given that heart disease is influenced by behaviours people can control, such as sedentary lifestyle, fatty diet and smoking, an insurance policy disadvantaging heart disease is unimaginable in the current cultural context. It is in these and many other ways that the cultural context has a broad and often powerful influence on the life circumstances of people with mental illnesses.
Effecting population-level change
But this is not the final reason that Time to Change and its evaluation are appropriately focused on population-level change. Without change at this level, even apparently effective individual-level interventions, ones with tight designs, robust effect sizes and tiny P-values, are subject to a sharp erosion of effects due to the influence of a broader cultural context that remains unchanged. This is not to say that such individual approaches are fruitless, far from it, rather all of us who implement them must keep the ultimate goal of population change in mind and build our efforts to achieve it.
As is true of almost everything in life the right goal is often an exceptionally difficult one to achieve. This is evident in the nine papers that this commentary accompanies. A sceptic would note that effect sizes are often small and not consistently significant across multiple indicators, Reference Evans-Lacko, Henderson and Thornicroft6-Reference Evans-Lacko, Henderson, Thornicroft and McCrone8 response rates in difficult-to-reach groups sometimes low, Reference Corker, Hamilton, Henderson, Weeks, Pinfold and Rose7 positive effects transitory, Reference Friedrich, Evans-Lacko, London, Rhydderch, Henderson and Thornicroft9 effects worse in a subgroup who knew about the campaign than in a group that did not, Reference Corker, Hamilton, Henderson, Weeks, Pinfold and Rose7 and possibilities of confounding that cannot be ruled out by design or analyses are present. Reference Evans-Lacko, Henderson and Thornicroft6-Reference Thornicroft, Goulden, Shefer, Rhydderch, Rose and Williams10 These problems are all forthrightly raised in the papers. At the same time, the accumulation of findings across all the papers reveals a pattern of generally positive change as some aspects of public attitudes improve, Reference Evans-Lacko, Henderson and Thornicroft6,Reference Evans-Lacko, Henderson, Thornicroft and McCrone8 media reporting is more positive, Reference Thornicroft, Goulden, Shefer, Rhydderch, Rose and Williams10 service users report less discrimination, Reference Corker, Hamilton, Henderson, Weeks, Pinfold and Rose7 employers are more informed and report policy changes favourable to people with mental health problems. Reference Henderson, Williams, Little and Thornicroft11 The findings need not have tracked in this generally positive direction but they did and their having done so provides information.
This study will change the landscape of stigma reduction intervention and evaluation efforts going forward. It will do so because of: (1) its focus on population-level change among the general public and key groups of interest, (2) its linking of population-level intervention efforts with population evaluation efforts, and (3) its multi-domain, multifaceted intervention and evaluation. Hopefully, it will spur future work to look beyond the small scale of single, individually based interventions to conceptualise how a multi-pronged intervention might slowly build to have long-lasting effects where they really matter - at the population level. Future researchers may learn from and improve on some of the shortcomings that have been so forthrightly presented in these papers but they will also be changed, and challenged toward a better end, by the ambition and the vision these papers collectively convey.
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