It is tempting to accept the conclusion from the paper by Mehta et al Reference Mehta, Kassam, Leese, Butler and Thornicroft1 that the Scottish anti-stigma campaign ‘see me’ has successfully influenced public attitudes north of the border. However, it is not clear that this is an appropriate conclusion from the data they present.
They describe random sampling techniques whereby 2000 adults representative of the UK population were surveyed. One presumes that this would give rise to cohorts in England which were roughly ten times larger than those in Scotland. Comparing the year 2000 against 2003, they observed a deterioration for 17/25 stigma questionnaire items in England against only 4/25 in Scotland, and concluded that Scotland's dubious distinction of having done less badly suggested that ‘see me’ had been effective. Can they assure us that this difference did not arise simply because the much larger samples in England would be more likely to show a statistically significant difference than smaller Scottish samples?
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