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毛利人和新西兰欧洲人对精神分裂症的认知差异。

Differences in patients' perceptions of Schizophrenia between Māori and New Zealand Europeans.

机构信息

Department of Psychological Medicine, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, University of Auckland, New Zealand.

出版信息

Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 2011 Jun;45(6):483-8. doi: 10.3109/00048674.2011.561479.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Māori (the Indigenous people of New Zealand) are disproportionately affected by mental illness and experience significantly poorer mental health compared to New Zealand Europeans. It is important to understand cultural differences in patients' ideas about mental illness in treatment settings. The aim of the present study was to investigate differences in illness perceptions between Māori and New Zealand Europeans diagnosed with schizophrenia.

METHOD

A total of 111 users of mental health services (68 Māori, 43 New Zealand European) in the greater Auckland and Northland areas who had been diagnosed with schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder were interviewed using the Brief Illness Perception Questionnaire and the Drug Attitude Inventory. District Health Board staff completed the Global Assessment of Functioning for each patient.

RESULTS

Māori with schizophrenia believed that their illness would continue significantly less time than New Zealand European patients did. Chance or spiritual factors were listed as causes of mental illness by only five Māori patients and no New Zealand European patients. Other illness perceptions, as well as attitudes towards medication, were comparable between groups. Across groups, the top perceived causes were drugs/alcohol, family relationships/abuse, and biological causes.

CONCLUSION

Illness perceptions provide a framework to assess patients' beliefs about their mental illness. Differences between Māori and New Zealand European patients' beliefs about their mental illness may be related to traditional Māori beliefs about mental illness. Knowledge of differences in illness perceptions provides an opportunity to design effective clinical interventions for both Māori and New Zealand Europeans.

摘要

目的

毛利人(新西兰的原住民)受精神疾病的影响不成比例,与新西兰欧洲人相比,他们的心理健康状况明显较差。了解患者在治疗环境中对精神疾病观念的文化差异非常重要。本研究的目的是调查精神分裂症患者中毛利人和新西兰欧洲人之间的疾病观念差异。

方法

在奥克兰和北地地区的心理健康服务机构中,共有 111 名被诊断患有精神分裂症或其他精神病的使用者(68 名毛利人,43 名新西兰欧洲人)接受了采访,使用了简短的疾病感知问卷和药物态度量表。地区卫生委员会的工作人员为每位患者完成了总体功能评估。

结果

患有精神分裂症的毛利人认为他们的病情持续时间明显短于新西兰欧洲患者。只有 5 名毛利患者将偶然或精神因素列为精神疾病的原因,而没有新西兰欧洲患者这样认为。其他疾病观念以及对药物的态度在两组之间相似。在两组中,被认为是主要致病因素的是药物/酒精、家庭关系/虐待和生物原因。

结论

疾病观念为评估患者对自身精神疾病的信念提供了一个框架。毛利人和新西兰欧洲患者对自身精神疾病的信念差异可能与传统毛利人对精神疾病的信念有关。了解疾病观念的差异为针对毛利人和新西兰欧洲人设计有效的临床干预措施提供了机会。

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