Health Commun. 2013 Oct 22. [Epub ahead of print]
Negative Public Perceptions of Juvenile Diabetics: Applying Attribution Theory to Understand the Public's Stigmatizing Views.
Author information
- a Department of Communication, SUNY at Buffalo.
Abstract
Despite a rise in the incidence of juvenile diabetes globally, little research has focused on public perceptions regarding its patients. The need to evaluate whether the public holds stigmatizing views is pressing when one considers the relatively young age of the patients of the disease. The current study extends the attribution theoretic framework to evaluate public stigma regarding juvenile diabetes. The findings suggest that a large percentage of individuals misattribute the causes of the disease and believe it is relatively rare and that its patients are personally responsible for contracting it. Individuals often utilize pejorative terms describing juvenile diabetes as a disease afflicting children who are lazy, unhealthy, fat, obese, lacking exercise, and having eating disorders.
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