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Majority still associates mental illness with disorders: Report

IANS  |  New Delhi 

is still considered a severe like and by a majority of people, indicates a report on Public Perception Towards in

The report, by The (TLLLF), was launched here on Friday by its founder and actess

The findings are based on views of 3,556 respondents across eight Indian cities, and highlights the importance of focused stigma-reduction programmes in initiatives.

As many as 87 percent of the respondents felt is a

Illustrating the poor understanding of the broad spectrum of mental illness, respondents were unlikely to associate with symptoms of more such as anxiety, when describing people with

Deepika, who had earlier opened up about battling depression, told the media: "When we were talking about more celebrities coming out and speaking and when we were talking about stigma, there is a lot of miscommunication that happens to people who are successful.

"I want to clarify that it can happen to anybody from any field. There is a perception that it happens to big (popular) people who are successful. It is sometimes perceived as luxury... (But) It is important to break that myth."

The survey also revealed high prevalence of stigma with 47 per cent of the respondents using the word "retard" to describe people with

Further, 60 per cent of respondents believe that people with "should have their own groups to avoid contaminating healthy people" and 68 per cent believe that they "should not be given any responsibility".

As many as 60 per cent of the respondents believe that is caused by a "lack of self-discipline and willpower".

TLLLF 2018 National Survey Report: 'How Perceives Mental Health,' is the result of a five-month research project commissioned in July 2017 by TLLLF.

Deepika was accompanied on Friday by Sanjeeva Kumar, Additional Secretary, and Family Welfare and Anna Chandy, of and Dr Shyam Bhat, - TLLLF, for the report's launch.

Chandy said: "Traditionally and historically, is a collectivistic society, now slowly moving towards a more individualistic one.

"In larger cities, we see a more dramatic shift towards individualism, possibly due to an increase in the amount of access to information and migrant need for survival.

"However, smaller cities like and seem to retain some of their collectivistic roots, and are moving towards an individualistic society at a slower pace."

Some of the other key highlights of the report are; approximately one in two people associate "being healthy" to "happiness", one in two people link "being healthy" with "having a sound/healthy mind", almost half of the participants used words such as "retard" or "crazy/mad/dtupid" while describing people with

As many as 92 per cent of the respondents believe that people with should visit a specialist doctor.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, March 23 2018. 19:26 IST
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