Tamura Masaki, Cage Eilidh, Perry Ella, Hongo Minako, Takahashi Toru, Seto Mikuko, Shimizu Eiji, Oshima Fumiyo
Department of Cognitive Behavioral Psychology, Chiba University Graduate School of Medicine, Chiba, Japan.
Division of Psychology, Faculty of Natural Sciences, University of Stirling, Stirling, United Kingdom.
Autism Adulthood. 2025 Feb 5;7(1):52-65. doi: 10.1089/aut.2023.0035. eCollection 2025 Feb.
Camouflaging refers to behaviors in which autistic individuals mask their autistic characteristics and "pass" as non-autistic people. It is postulated that camouflaging is a response to stigma, and preliminary evidence supports this hypothesis. However, research on this topic outside of Western countries is limited. This study replicated and extended previous work in the West that examined the relationships between camouflaging, stigma, and mental health of autistic adults, with a Japanese sample.
Two-hundred eighty-seven autistic people living in Japan (146 men, 120 women, 14 nonbinary, 5 other gender identities, 2 preferred not to say; mean age = 37.5 years, standard deviation = 9.8 years) completed an online survey on camouflaging, perceived stigma, coping strategies for stigma, mental well-being, generalized anxiety, social anxiety, and depression. We used hierarchical multiple regression analyses to investigate the relationships between camouflaging and stigma and coping strategies for stigma. Mediation analyses were also employed to examine whether camouflaging mediated the relationships between stigma and autistic people's mental health.
Replicating previous work, we found that higher camouflaging was associated with higher perceived stigma. Both coping strategies of hiding/denying and valuing/embracing stigmatized characteristics were positively related to camouflaging. Camouflaging mediated the association of stigma with depression, generalized anxiety, and social anxiety (but not well-being).
Our findings support the hypothesis that camouflaging is closely related to autism-related stigma and can influence the impact of stigma on mental health. More work around social outreach and addressing autism-related stigma would be beneficial to reduce the negative role of camouflaging.
伪装是指自闭症个体掩盖自身自闭症特征并表现得“像”非自闭症患者的行为。据推测,伪装是对污名的一种反应,初步证据支持这一假设。然而,西方国家以外关于这一主题的研究有限。本研究以日本样本重复并扩展了西方之前关于自闭症成年人伪装、污名和心理健康之间关系的研究。
287名生活在日本的自闭症患者(146名男性,120名女性,14名非二元性别,5名其他性别认同者,2名不愿透露;平均年龄 = 37.5岁,标准差 = 9.8岁)完成了一项关于伪装、感知到的污名、应对污名的策略、心理健康、广泛性焦虑、社交焦虑和抑郁的在线调查。我们使用分层多元回归分析来研究伪装与污名以及应对污名策略之间的关系。还采用中介分析来检验伪装是否介导了污名与自闭症患者心理健康之间的关系。
重复之前的研究,我们发现更高程度的伪装与更高的感知污名相关。隐藏/否认和重视/接受被污名化特征这两种应对策略都与伪装呈正相关。伪装介导了污名与抑郁、广泛性焦虑和社交焦虑(但不包括幸福感)之间的关联。
我们的研究结果支持以下假设,即伪装与自闭症相关污名密切相关,并可能影响污名对心理健康的影响。围绕社会宣传和解决自闭症相关污名开展更多工作,将有助于减少伪装的负面作用。