“…Stigma negatively affects (suspected) patients' and survivors' mental health because the stigmatized perceive themselves as alienated, isolated, and belonging to a devalued group and perceive stigma as unfair. Indeed, empirical findings generally show that stigma harms (suspected) patients' and survivors' mental health and leads to issues like depression (Liu D. et al, 2020 ; Xin et al, 2020 ; Grover et al, 2021 ; Harjana et al, 2021 ; Jayakody et al, 2021 ; Kang et al, 2021 ; Yuan et al, 2021 ), anxiety (Liu D. et al, 2020 ; Atinga et al, 2021 ; Gopichandran and Subramaniam, 2021 ; Grover et al, 2021 ; Harjana et al, 2021 ; Jayakody et al, 2021 ; Kang et al, 2021 ), mental health disorders (Adom et al, 2021 ; Miconi et al, 2021a ; Paleari et al, 2021 ), lower well-being (Ransing et al, 2020 ; Al Eid et al, 2021 ; Paleari et al, 2021 ; Sahoo and Patel, 2021 ), PTSD (Liu D. et al, 2020 ; Grover et al, 2021 ; Kang et al, 2021 ; Mahmoudi et al, 2021 ; Poyraz et al, 2021 ; Gan et al, 2022 ), and even self-harm or suicide (Ransing et al, 2020 ; Xin et al, 2020 ; Sahoo and Patel, 2021 ). For example, in a large sample involving more than 20,000 Chinese students, one study found that perceived discrimination due to COVID-19 is positively related to self-harm or suicidal ideation (Xin et al, 2020 ).…”