Stigma and Mental Illness succeeds in exposing the enmeshed connection between stigma and mental illness. This book seeks to weaken the link between mental illness and stigmatization and provides concrete suggestions for health care and society. Stigma and Mental Illness is a unique education for all health care professionals: students, residents, and their teachers. It is comprehensive, authoritative, well-reasoned, compelling, theoretically sound, and clinically relevant.
* New England Journal of Medicine *
This is a wide-ranging book, which brings together multiple perspectives on the often neglected subject of stigma and mental illness. I recommend the book as a standard reference for those interested in the subject of stigma.
* JAMA *
The book not only delineates the process of stigmatization; it also includes many constructive suggestions for change. The deserves a wide readership.
* Innovations & Research *
Doctors Fink and Tasman have utilized the anthology structure to permit experts in a large number of stigma's aspects to present their worthy contributions to the book. There is something here for everyone. Family members stand to gain as much as professionals do from reading it. . . . the information is both high caliber and up to date.
* Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal *
Although slender in length, the scope of their book is encyclopedic. . . [T]here is an admirable (and all too rare) mix of psychiatric and psychological orientations among chapter authors. Fink and Tasman clearly succeed in documenting their thesis that 'stigma is. . . an insidious problem that is destructive to families, mentally ill patients, and the profession of psychiatry'. They have produced a valuable resource on a complex and very important subject.
* Contemporary Psychology *