Working Paper

Depression Stigma

Christopher Roth, Peter Schwardmann, Egon Tripodi
CESifo, Munich, 2024

CESifo Working Paper No. 11012

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.

CESifo Category
Behavioural Economics
Keywords: depression, stigma, information, psychotherapy