Mariana Espinola-Nadurille, Guadalupe Delgado
Neuropsychiatry Unit, National Institute of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Mexico.
Int J Soc Psychiatry. 2009 May;55(3):238-46. doi: 10.1177/0020764008093466.
The prevalence of mental disorders in Mexico is 26.1%. This shows that an important percentage of the population suffers from mental disability. Despite this the country's healthcare system does not provide the least acceptable standard of care for the mentally disabled.
The aim of this study was to describe the general population's social representations of the disabled and analyze their relationship with the discriminatory practices from the state towards the mentally ill with respect to their right to health.
This study was a secondary analysis of the First National Survey on Discrimination in Mexico. In the survey 1,437 effective interviews that comprised a representative sample, were obtained from people aged 18 to 60 living in rural and urban settings. The response rate was 76.5%. The assessment tool was a self-administered questionnaire that yielded perceptions, attitudes, values and social representations about discrimination towards groups of people that supposedly were targets of discrimination by the general population. In the survey the mentally ill were included under disability. As a secondary analysis of the survey for the purpose of this study, we selected a subset of questions that provided important information about social representations of the general Mexican population towards persons with disabilities. The general population's social representations of the disabled were analyzed.
The disabled are the second group after the elderly perceived as the most discriminated and neglected and bearing more suffering. A whole set of negative representations concerning the disabled, such as lack of acceptance and respect, low self-confidence, mistreatment, incomprehension, isolation, intolerance, indifference and bad attitudes from others, were elicited.
Social representations are social correspondents of the discriminatory practices that the state exerts toward the mentally ill with respect to their right to health. These representations serve to maintain, naturalize and legitimize these practices. All sectors of society should make an effort to change the negative social representations towards this vulnerable section of society.
墨西哥精神障碍的患病率为26.1%。这表明相当一部分人口患有精神残疾。尽管如此,该国的医疗保健系统并未为精神残疾者提供最起码可接受的护理标准。
本研究的目的是描述普通民众对残疾人的社会认知,并分析其与国家在精神疾病患者健康权方面的歧视性做法之间的关系。
本研究是对墨西哥第一次全国歧视调查的二次分析。在该调查中,从生活在农村和城市地区的18至60岁人群中获得了1437份有效访谈,构成了一个具有代表性的样本。答复率为76.5%。评估工具是一份自填式问卷,该问卷产生了关于对被普遍认为是歧视对象群体的歧视的认知、态度、价值观和社会认知。在调查中,精神疾病患者被纳入残疾类别。作为本研究目的的调查二次分析,我们选择了一组问题,这些问题提供了关于墨西哥普通民众对残疾人社会认知的重要信息。分析了普通民众对残疾人的社会认知。
残疾人是继老年人之后被认为最受歧视、最被忽视且遭受更多痛苦的第二大群体。引发了一整套关于残疾人的负面认知,如不被接受和尊重、缺乏自信、受虐待、不被理解、被孤立、不宽容、冷漠以及他人的不良态度。
社会认知是国家在精神疾病患者健康权方面对其实施的歧视性做法的社会对应物。这些认知有助于维持这些做法、使其自然化并使其合法化。社会各部门应努力改变对这一弱势群体的负面社会认知。