Home » Psychology news » Stigmas, once evolutionarily sound, are now bad health strategies
Stigmas, once evolutionarily sound, are now bad health strategies
April 1, 2014 by NewsBot
Stigmatization may have once served to protect early humans from infectious diseases, but that strategy may do more harm than good for modern humans, according to Penn State researchers."The things that made stigmas a more functional strategy thousands of years ago rarely exist," said Rachel Smith, associate professor of communication arts and sciences and human development and family studies.