TY - JOUR AU - Thomas, Alaina AU - Maina, Nicole AU - Chiu, Stacy AU - Lee-Kwong, Christopher AU - Liu, Katie PY - 2022/02/16 Y2 - 2024/03/28 TI - The Power of Education: Comparing Implicit Stigma Toward Mental Health Care in Psychology and Non-Psychology Students JF - Revue YOUR Review (York Online Undergraduate Research) JA - Revue YOUR Review VL - 7 IS - SE - Articles DO - UR - https://yourreview.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/yourreview/article/view/40604 SP - AB - <p>Fewer than a third of people living with mental health problems reach out for professional help, which could be due, in part, to negative stigma toward mental health issues. Typically, stigmatization toward any issue decreases as individuals gain more familiarity and knowledge about them. In this study, we measured whether students studying psychology have less implicit negative bias toward seeking psychological care. We adapted the Implicit Association Test (IAT) to evaluate how psychology and non-psychology students react to stereotypes against seeking out psychological care. Specifically, we measured and compared how easily these students classify words related to personality traits and to activities within stereotyped categories (i.e., care-seeking activities coupled with negative traits such as counselling-antisocial) and within non-stereotyped categories (i.e., care-seeking activities coupled with positive traits such as counselling-sociable). As expected, all students were faster at classifying items within the stereotype-congruent category. However, psychology students were not as affected by the stereotype non-congruent category: pairing positive attributes to care-seeking activities did not slow psychology students as much. These results suggest that exposure to psychology courses contributes to reducing implicit biases against mental health care. It is hoped that the 2020 Covid-19 pandemic will promote awareness about mental health issues, which in turn will decrease negative stigma toward mental health care.</p> ER -