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Cross-cultural variation in experiences of acceptance, camouflaging and mental health difficulties in autism: A registered report

Authors :
Keating, Connor Tom
Hickman, Lydia
Geelhand, Philippine
Takahashi, Toru
Leung, Joan
Monk, Ruth
Schuster, Bianca
Rybicki, Alicia
Girolamo, Teresa Marie
Clin, Elise
Papastamou, Fanny
Belenger, Marie
Eigsti, Inge-Marie
Cook, Jennifer Louise
Kosaka, Hirotaka
Osu, Rieko
Okamoto, Yuko
Carvalho, Sophie Sowden
Keating, Connor Tom
Hickman, Lydia
Geelhand, Philippine
Takahashi, Toru
Leung, Joan
Monk, Ruth
Schuster, Bianca
Rybicki, Alicia
Girolamo, Teresa Marie
Clin, Elise
Papastamou, Fanny
Belenger, Marie
Eigsti, Inge-Marie
Cook, Jennifer Louise
Kosaka, Hirotaka
Osu, Rieko
Okamoto, Yuko
Carvalho, Sophie Sowden
Source :
PloS one, 19 (3 March
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Recent findings suggest that stigma and camouflaging contribute to mental health difficulties for autistic individuals, however, this evidence is largely based on UK samples. While studies have shown cross-cultural differences in levels of autism-related stigma, it is unclear whether camouflaging and mental health difficulties vary across cultures. Hence, the current study had two aims: (1) to determine whether significant relationships between autism acceptance, camouflaging, and mental health difficulties replicate in a cross-cultural sample of autistic adults, and (2) to compare these variables across cultures. To fulfil these aims, 306 autistic adults from eight countries (Australia, Belgium, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the United States) completed a series of online questionnaires. We found that external acceptance and personal acceptance were associated with lower levels of depression but not camouflaging or stress. Higher camouflaging was associated with elevated levels of depression, anxiety, and stress. Significant differences were found across countries in external acceptance, personal acceptance, depression, anxiety, and stress, even after controlling for relevant covariates. Levels of camouflaging also differed across countries however this effect became non-significant after controlling for the covariates. These findings have significant implications, identifying priority regions for anti-stigma interventions, and highlighting countries where greater support for mental health difficulties is needed.<br />SCOPUS: ar.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
PloS one, 19 (3 March
Notes :
1 full-text file(s): application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1435877424
Document Type :
Electronic Resource