Skip to main content
Indian Journal of Psychiatry logoLink to Indian Journal of Psychiatry
. 1989 Oct-Dec;31(4):315–318.

THE SOCIAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL CORRELATES OF LEPROSY

RN Chatterjee 1,, DN Nandi 2, Gauranga Banerjee 3, Biswajit Sen 4, A Mukherjee 5, Gautam Banerjee 6
PMCID: PMC3172021  PMID: 21927408

SUMMARY

Leprosy, one of the most chronic tropical diseases, acts as a unique psychosocial stressor for the social stigma associated with it. The present study assessed the nature of such stigma and its possible effect on the patient's mental health. Leprosy patients perceive that (a) their illness evokes public fear and hate, (b) it is degrading and humiliating and they should be segregated from family and society and (c) it is incurable and a consequence of sin. Psychiatric morbidity is commoner among the in-patients (64%) than among the out-patients (25%).

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (127.1 KB).


Articles from Indian Journal of Psychiatry are provided here courtesy of Wolters Kluwer -- Medknow Publications

RESOURCES