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Planning a Stigmatized Nonvisible Illness Disclosure: Applying the Disclosure Decision-Making Model
2016
Journal of Psychology
This study applied the disclosure decision-making model (DD-MM) to explore how individuals plan to disclose nonvisible illness (Study 1), compared to planning to disclose personal information (Study 2). Study 1 showed that perceived stigma from the illness negatively predicted disclosure efficacy; closeness predicted anticipated response (i.e., provision of support) although it did not influence disclosure efficacy; disclosure efficacy led to reduced planning, with planning leading to
doi:10.1080/00223980.2016.1226742
pmid:27662447
pmcid:PMC5215027
fatcat:vgvggx5hpffrpbubdwszqqkeem