Discussion paper

DP18919 Depression Stigma

Throughout history, people with mental illness have been discriminated against and stigmatized. Our experiment provides a new measure of perceived depression stigma and then investigates the causal effect of perceived stigma on help-seeking in a sample of 1,844 Americans suffering from depression. A large majority of our participants overestimate the extent of stigma associated with depression. In contrast to prior correlational evidence, lowering perceived social stigma through an information intervention leads to a reduction in the demand for psychotherapy. A mechanism experiment reveals that this information increases optimism about future mental health, thereby reducing the perceived need for therapy.

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Citation

Roth, C, P Schwardmann and E Tripodi (2024), ‘DP18919 Depression Stigma‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 18919. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp18919