{"quotes":[{"text":"His character would be blamed, loathed, discussed, and adored – but somewhere there, behind his mask of a hero, Cardew would remain faceless.Anonymous.","author":"Simona Panova","tags":["adore","adored","anonymous","behind","blame","blamed","cardew","character","discuss","discussed","faceless","gothic","hate","hero","heroic","hide","loathe","loathed","love","loved","mask","masked","mystery","pretend","pretending","romance","unknown","young-adult"],"id":7810,"author_id":"Simona+Panova"},{"text":"Refuse to blame yourself for not being 'good enough.","author":"John Mark Green","tags":["being-blamed","blame","blame-game","blame-the-victim","blamed","blaming-yourself","critical-people","self-blame","self-critical"],"id":180403,"author_id":"John+Mark+Green"},{"text":"Although stigmatizing attitudes are not limited to mental illness, the public seems to disapprove persons with psychiatric disabilities significantly more than persons with related conditions such as physical illness (34-36). Severe mental illness has been likened to drug addiction, prostitution, and criminality (37,38). Unlike physical disabilities, persons with mental illness are perceived by the public to be in control of their disabilities and responsible for causing them (34,36). Furthermore, research respondents are less likely to pity persons with mental illness, instead reacting to psychiatric disability with anger and believing that help is not deserved (35,36,39).'World Psychiatry. 2002 Feb; 1(1): 16–20.PMCID: PMC1489832Understanding the impact of stigma on people with mental illnessPATRICK W CORRIGAN and AMY C WATSON.","author":"Patrick W. Corrigan","tags":["bias","blame","blamed","disabilities","disability","disabled","disabled-veterans","discrimination","fear","mental-health-stigma","stereotyped-prejudices","stigma","stigmatization","stigmatized"],"id":429573,"author_id":"Patrick+W.+Corrigan"}],"pagination":{"page":1,"page_size":10,"total":3,"pages":1}}
