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Stigmatization Of Mental Illness Essay

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Stigmatization of Mental Illness- D.I.D.

Have you ever had to think about if something exists or not? Has someone ever told you that something is a lie that you believe in? This is what happens when you are in a world with mental illnesses and disorders like DID in it. Dissociative Identity Disorder or what used to be Multiple Personality Disorder (DID or MPD) is defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders as “one of several dissociative disorders with the key element being the presence of at least two distinct and separate personalities within an individual.” Mental illnesses have a strong stigma behind them that needs to be broken because they do exist and it doesn’t create bad people or broken people.
Mental illnesses are greatly stigmatized in society today, but one disorder in particular is called Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) formally known as multiple personality disorder. The Diagnostics and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) is a resource used by an array of mental health professionals and clinicians to associate and diagnose mental disorders. The key component to …show more content…

Not only is DID stigmatized, but so are all mental illness/disorders. Not reporting or seeking help with the disease is a strong indicator of why some may not think these things even exist. “Many people will not seek help due to the stigma of being mentally ill, though for most the disorders are treatable,” says Kathryn Smith in her article “The stigma of mental illness follows you for life.” She also states, “until people change their prejudices and preconceptions of mental illness, it will always have a stigma attached to it and will hold back early recovery” in the same article. If the stigma disappeared, less people would be ashamed of being mentally ill and seek the help they

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