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Depression Stigma and Treatment Preferences Among Orthodox and Non-Orthodox Jews

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2014

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Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
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Baruch, David E., Jonathan W. Kanter, Steven Pirutinsky, Joseph Murphy, and David H. Rosmain. 2014. “Depression Stigma and Treatment Preferences Among Orthodox and Non-Orthodox Jews.” The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 202 (7) (July): 556–561. doi:10.1097/nmd.0000000000000158.

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Abstract

Anecdotal reports of increased stigma toward mental illness among Orthodox Jews seems to conflict with an existing literature describing less stigmatization toward depression among Jewish individuals. This online survey study investigated stigma toward depression and treatment preference among Orthodox and non-Orthodox Jews (N = 391). All participants were presented with a depression vignette to assess for stigma and then randomized to a vignette depicting a treatment modality (behaviorally oriented or insight oriented) to assess for treatment preference across several delivery options (individual, group, or Internet). Results indicated elevated depression stigma among Orthodox Jews as expressed by elevated levels of secrecy, treatment-seeking stigma, family/marriage stigma, and stigmatizing experiences, but not attitudinal social distancing. No group differences were found with respect to overall treatment preference, treatment modality, or manner of delivery. Overall, participants preferred individual therapy more than group and Internet therapy and preferred group therapy more than Internet therapy. Clinical and research implications are discussed.

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Judiasm, mental health, stigma, culturally-informed practice

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