“…647 Stigma has been attributed to and associated with a wide range of attitudes, behaviors, circumstances, health conditions, social influences, and outcomes, including QOL, self-esteem, self-appraisal of competence, recovery, empowerment, social support, social integration, psychiatric symptoms, anxiety, avoidance/withdrawal, medication adherence, secrecy, and social and psychological functioning. [647][648][649][650][651][652][653] Pescosolido et al 654 elucidate the ways in which stigma comes to be defined in, and enacted through, social interactions, making clear that while stigma attaches to individuals, individuals do not develop beliefs and attitudes in a void but rather are influenced by a host and range of social, economic, cultural, and political contexts that shape expectations and cognitive processing. This framework 654 articulates the ways in which these contributing factors interact to produce stigma and discrimination, incorporating a wide range of theoretical constructs from labeling theory, social network theory, the limited capacity model of media influence, the social psychology of prejudice and discrimination, and theories of the welfare state.…”