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医学生对精神疾病的态度:医学院教育是否能减少污名化?

Medical student attitudes about mental illness: does medical-school education reduce stigma?

机构信息

Centre for Psychiatry, Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine, Barts and The London School of Medicine, UK.

出版信息

Acad Psychiatry. 2012 May 1;36(3):197-204. doi: 10.1176/appi.ap.10110159.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Reducing stigma associated with mental illness is an important aim of medical education, yet evidence indicates that medical students' attitudes toward patients with mental health problems deteriorate as they progress through medical school.

OBJECTIVES

Authors examined medical students' attitudes to mental illness, as compared with attitudes toward other medical illness, and the influence of the number of years spent in medical school, as well as of several key socio-demographic, ethnic, and cultural variables.

METHODS

A group of 760 U.K. medical students completed a nationwide on-line survey examining their attitudes toward patients with five conditions (pneumonia, depression, psychotic symptoms, intravenous drug use, long-standing unexplained abdominal complaints), using the Medical Condition Regard Scale (MCRS). Students were also asked whether they had completed the psychiatry rotation or had personal experience of mental disorders themselves or among their friends or family members. They were also asked about their ethnic group (using U.K. national census categories), religious affiliation, and how important religion was in their lives. Independent-samples t-tests and one-way ANOVA were used to compare differences between groups on the MCRS.

RESULTS

Students showed the highest regard for patients with pneumonia and lowest regard for patients with long-standing, unexplained abdominal complaints. Although attitudes toward pneumonia were more positive in fifth-year students than in first-year students, attitudes toward unexplained chronic abdominal pain were worse in fifth-year students than in first-year students. Personal experience of mental health treatment, or that among family and friends, were associated with less stigmatizing attitudes. Men showed more stigmatization than women for nearly all conditions; Chinese and South Asian students showed more stigmatizing attitudes toward delusions and hallucinations than their white British counterparts.

CONCLUSIONS

Medical students in this survey showed the lowest regard for patients with unexplained abdominal pain, and these attitudes were worse in the most experienced medical students. Students' gender, culture and direct or indirect experience of mental illness influenced stigmatizing attitudes.

摘要

背景

减少与精神疾病相关的污名化是医学教育的一个重要目标,但有证据表明,随着医学生在医学院的学习进展,他们对有心理健康问题的患者的态度会恶化。

目的

作者研究了医学生对精神疾病的态度,以及与对其他医学疾病的态度的比较,以及在医学院学习的年限以及几个关键的社会人口学、种族和文化变量的影响。

方法

一组 760 名英国医学生通过在线调查完成了一项调查,使用医学疾病观量表(MCRS)检查了他们对五种疾病(肺炎、抑郁症、精神病症状、静脉内药物使用、长期不明原因的腹部投诉)的患者的态度。学生还被问到他们是否完成了精神病旋转或自己或在朋友或家人中是否有精神障碍的个人经验,以及他们的种族群体(使用英国国家人口普查类别)、宗教信仰以及宗教在他们生活中的重要性。独立样本 t 检验和单向方差分析用于比较 MCRS 中各组之间的差异。

结果

学生对患有肺炎的患者表现出最高的尊重,对患有长期、不明原因的腹部投诉的患者则表现出最低的尊重。尽管五年级学生对肺炎的态度比一年级学生更积极,但五年级学生对不明原因的慢性腹痛的态度比一年级学生更差。个人经历的心理健康治疗或家庭和朋友中的经历与较少的污名化态度有关。男性对几乎所有疾病的污名化程度都高于女性;中国和南亚学生对妄想和幻觉的污名化态度比他们的英国白人同龄人更为严重。

结论

在这项调查中,医学生对不明原因的腹痛表现出最低的尊重,而在经验最丰富的医学生中,这些态度更差。学生的性别、文化以及直接或间接的精神疾病经历影响了污名化态度。

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