‘I remember when one of my children was quite young, still an infant, and we were in a really difficult situation and very isolated, I couldn’t keep the house warm as we couldn’t afford it. And she ended up getting quite sick with bronchiolitis.
‘So I took her to the hospital. I’m trying to express how urgent I knew this situation was. I could tell the doctor placed me as just a poor, anxious mother. And we got sent home.
‘I was incredibly lucky that somebody in my life was a trained nurse and she saw my daughter and she said, “You need to get into the hospital now”. And on the way to hospital, her lips started turning blue. She could have died. I was poor and I looked poor, but I also have autism and come across as “different” in many situations. So stigma acted in my disabilities too.’
‘People assuming because you come from a family where your parents are substance abusers, means that you automatically must be or that you have been sent in [to hospital or doctor] to get stuff for ’em. When in reality you have a fracture and pain and you actually need help, and them just associating you by a last thing or the fact that they’ve seen you with someone and deciding you are exactly the same as that.’
– Harley, young person from a rural area
‘When I walked into a police station in a PTSD response over a recent action my violent ex had taken, the officer thought he already knew the situation. He saw an hysterical woman overreacting. As a result, he denied me the service his role offered – that of protecting me and my children from harm. Instead, he gave me ridiculous reasons about why someone had been on my property, looking through the windows and taking pictures – one being perhaps the electricity person was doing a meter reading. Stigma can result in differential treatment, mishearing, not listening to someone, or a denial of service.’