Dartmouth Centers for Health and Aging, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Lebanon, NH, USA; Center for Multicultural Mental Health Research, Cambridge Health Alliance, Somerville, MA, USA.
Int J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2013 Oct;28(10):1061-8. doi: 10.1002/gps.3928. Epub 2013 Jan 29.
The current study applies the perceived stigma framework to identify differences in attitudes toward mental health and mental health treatment among various racial/ethnic minority older adults with common mental health problems including depression, anxiety disorders, or at-risk alcohol use. Specifically, this study examines to what extent race/ethnicity is associated with differences in (1) perceived stigma of mental illness and (2) perceived stigma for different mental health treatment options.
Analyses were conducted using baseline data collected from participants who completed the SAMHSA Mental Health and Alcohol Abuse Stigma Assessment, developed for the PRISM-E (Primary Care Research in Substance Abuse and Mental Health for the Elderly) study, a multisite randomized trial for older adults (65+ years) with depression, anxiety, or at-risk alcohol consumption. The final sample consisted of 1247 non-Latino Whites, 536 African-Americans, 112 Asian-Americans, and 303 Latinos.
African-Americans and Latinos expressed greater comfort in speaking to primary care physicians or mental health professionals concerning mental illness compared with non-Latino Whites. Asian-Americans and Latinos expressed greater shame and embarrassment about having a mental illness than non-Latino Whites. Asian-Americans expressed greater difficulty in seeking or engaging in mental health treatment.
Racial/ethnic differences exist among older adults with mental illness with respect to stigmatizing attitudes toward mental illness and mental health treatment. Results of this study could help researchers and clinicians educate racial/ethnic minority older adults about mental illness and engage them in much needed mental health services.
本研究应用感知污名框架,以确定具有常见心理健康问题(包括抑郁、焦虑障碍或酒精使用风险)的不同种族/族裔少数族裔老年人对心理健康和心理健康治疗的态度存在差异。具体而言,本研究考察种族/族裔差异与以下方面的关联程度:(1)对精神疾病的感知污名,以及(2)对不同心理健康治疗选择的感知污名。
使用从完成 SAMHSA 心理健康和酒精滥用污名评估的参与者那里收集到的基线数据进行分析,该评估是为 PRISM-E(老年人药物滥用和心理健康初级保健研究)研究开发的,这是一项针对有抑郁、焦虑或酒精使用风险的老年人(65 岁及以上)的多地点随机试验。最终样本包括 1247 名非拉丁裔白人、536 名非裔美国人、112 名亚裔美国人和 303 名拉丁裔人。
与非拉丁裔白人相比,非裔美国人和拉丁裔人更愿意与初级保健医生或心理健康专业人士谈论精神疾病。与非拉丁裔白人相比,亚裔美国人和拉丁裔人对患有精神疾病感到更羞耻和尴尬。亚裔美国人在寻求或参与心理健康治疗方面遇到更大的困难。
在对精神疾病的污名化态度以及对心理健康治疗的态度方面,患有精神疾病的老年人群体中存在种族/族裔差异。本研究的结果可以帮助研究人员和临床医生向少数族裔老年人群体普及精神疾病知识,并使他们能够获得急需的心理健康服务。