What Contributes to Stigma Towards Autistic University Students and Students with Other Diagnoses?
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Springer
Abstract
Little remains known about the degree to which autistic university students are stigmatized relative to students with other diagnoses. We conducted an online survey with students in New York City (n = 633) and Beirut (n = 274). Students with diagnoses that were perceived as dangerous (e.g., psychopathy) were more stigmatized than students with diagnoses that were perceived as less dangerous (e.g., autism). Disruptive autistic behaviors (described via vignettes) evoked more stigma than withdrawn behaviors. Perceived dangerousness predicted autism stigma. Greater acceptance of inequality, less openness, and lower cognitive empathy co-occurred with heightened stigma towards most conditions. Diagnostic labels were typically less stigmatized than behaviors. Findings suggest that interventions are needed to decrease stigma towards varied diagnoses in collegiate communities. © 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
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Adhd, Autism, College, Empathy, Learning disability, Neurodiversity, Stigma, University, Adolescent, Autistic disorder, Female, Humans, Lebanon, Male, Social stigma, Students, Surveys and questionnaires, United states, Universities, Young adult, Adult, Article, Attention deficit disorder, Disruptive behavior, Drug dependence, Eating disorder, Gender, Hazard, Human, Major clinical study, Mania, New york, Priority journal, Psychopathy, Responsibility, Schizophrenia, Social distance, Social phobia, University student, Vignette, Physiology, Psychology, Questionnaire, Student