Mental health stigma contributes to failure to seek professional psychological treatment, yet evidence suggests that video interventions may be effective in reducing such stigma. The current study hypothesized that a brief TED Talk on mental illness would result in more positive attitudes toward mental health treatment seeking compared to a control TED Talk. American adults (N = 141) were randomly assigned to video conditions and then were asked to evaluate the videos and provide a self-report of their attitudes toward seeking professional psychological treatment. It was found that, compared to the control video condition, the mental health video condition displayed more positive attitudes toward mental health treatment seeking. Exploratory analysis investigated the video factors related to these attitudes. These findings provide additional evidence that video interventions are effective in reducing stigma related to mental illness and that brief TED Talk videos may be a free, easy-to-access, and publicly available source for future interventions to reduce mental health stigma.
Public Policy Relevance StatementThis study suggests that a brief TED Talk about mental health promotes more positive attitudes toward psychological treatment seeking and that presenters who are perceived as more attractive and more similar to viewers may have stronger effects on these attitudes. Such publicly available videos allow for easy dissemination to broad audiences in varied settings and thus may offer a prime avenue for future educational interventions aimed at mental health stigma.