Section of Community Mental Health, PO29, Health Service and Population Research Department, King's College London, Institute of Psychiatry, De Crespigny Park, London SE5 8AF, England.
Schizophr Res. 2011 Dec;133(1-3):8-16. doi: 10.1016/j.schres.2011.09.011. Epub 2011 Oct 18.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Many people with schizophrenia face stigmatisation. Several methods have been produced to simulate the auditory and visual hallucinations experienced by people with schizophrenia in order to increase empathy and understanding about the condition. However, there has been no review of such methods. This systematic review aims to determine whether and how simulated hallucinations are effective in reducing stigma, and if simulated hallucinations are safe and acceptable.
Medline, Embase, PsycInfo, the Cochrane Library, CINAHL, and Worldcat Dissertations and Theses were searched from 1980 to September 2010. Reference checking, hand-searching, and contacting of experts in the field were also performed. A narrative synthesis of quantitative studies was conducted, and qualitative studies were synthesised using meta-ethnography.
Ten studies were included. Simulation tools varied in context, but consistently increased both empathy towards, and desire for social distance from, people with schizophrenia whilst findings for other attitudes were inconsistent. Participants reported physical, cognitive and emotional discomfort. Qualitative data suggest that these discomforts give participants an 'insider's perspective' which produced empathy and respect. Simulated hallucinations sometimes produced concurrent negative affect, and physical and emotional distress, but were considered a highly acceptable learning tool.
DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS: Simulated hallucinations have contradictory effects on stigma, increasing empathy but also the desire for social distance. They should therefore be used with caution. Further research is required to discover if there is a way of using simulated hallucination interventions that increases empathy without increasing the desire for social distance from people with mental illness.
背景/目的:许多精神分裂症患者面临污名化问题。已经开发出多种方法来模拟精神分裂症患者所经历的听觉和视觉幻觉,以增加对这种疾病的同理心和理解。然而,尚未对这些方法进行综述。本系统综述旨在确定模拟幻觉是否以及如何有效减少污名化,以及模拟幻觉是否安全和可接受。
从 1980 年到 2010 年 9 月,检索了 Medline、Embase、PsycInfo、Cochrane 图书馆、CINAHL 和 Worldcat Dissertations and Theses。还进行了参考文献检查、手工检索以及联系该领域的专家。对定量研究进行了叙述性综合,对定性研究使用元民族学进行了综合。
纳入了 10 项研究。模拟工具的背景各不相同,但都一致增加了对精神分裂症患者的同理心和社会距离的渴望,而其他态度的发现则不一致。参与者报告了身体、认知和情绪不适。定性数据表明,这些不适为参与者提供了一种“内部视角”,从而产生了同理心和尊重。模拟幻觉有时会产生并发的负面情绪、身体和情绪困扰,但被认为是一种高度可接受的学习工具。
讨论/结论:模拟幻觉对污名化有相反的影响,增加了同理心,但也增加了对与精神疾病患者保持社会距离的渴望。因此,应谨慎使用。需要进一步研究以确定是否有一种使用模拟幻觉干预措施的方法,可以在增加同理心的同时减少对与精神疾病患者保持社会距离的渴望。