Ighodaro Adesuwa, Stefanovics Elina, Makanjuola Victor, Rosenheck Robert
Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA,
Acad Psychiatry. 2015 Jun;39(3):280-5. doi: 10.1007/s40596-014-0169-9. Epub 2014 Jun 6.
The authors surveyed attitudes towards mental illness among Nigerian medical personnel at three different levels of training and experience: medical students who had not completed their psychiatry rotation, medical students who had competed their psychiatry rotation, and graduate physicians.
Six questions addressed beliefs about the effectiveness of treatments for four specific mental illnesses (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression, and anxiety) and two medical illnesses (diabetes and hypertension) among the three groups. A self-report questionnaire including 56 dichotomous items was used to compare beliefs about and attitudes towards people with mental illness. Factor analysis was used to identify key attitudes and analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) was used to compare the groups adjusting for age and personal experience with people with mental illness.
There were no significant trends in attitudes towards the effectiveness of medication. Exploratory factor analysis of the beliefs and attitudes items identified four factors: (1) comfort socializing with people with mental, illness; (2) non-superstitious beliefs about the causes of mental illness; (3) neighborly feelings towards people with mental illness; and (4) belief that stress and abuse are part of the etiology of mental illness. ANCOVA comparing attitudes among the three groups showed that on three (1, 2, and 4) of the four factors medical students who had completed a rotation in psychiatry had significantly higher scores than the medical students who had not completed a rotation in psychiatry. Graduate physicians showed a similar pattern scoring higher than the medical students who had not completed a rotation in psychiatry in two factors (1 and 4) but showed no differences from students who had completed their psychiatry rotation.
While beliefs about medication effectiveness do not differ between medical trainees and graduate professionals, stigmatizing attitudes towards people with mental illness seem to be most strongly affected by clinical training. Psychiatric education and especially clinical experience result in more progressive attitudes towards people with mental illness.
作者调查了处于三个不同培训和经验水平的尼日利亚医务人员对精神疾病的态度,这三个水平分别是:尚未完成精神病学轮转的医学生、已完成精神病学轮转的医学生以及住院医师。
针对三组人员提出了六个问题,涉及对四种特定精神疾病(精神分裂症、双相情感障碍、抑郁症和焦虑症)以及两种躯体疾病(糖尿病和高血压)治疗效果的看法。使用一份包含56个二分项目的自填式问卷来比较对精神疾病患者的看法和态度。采用因子分析来确定关键态度,并使用协方差分析(ANCOVA)来比较在调整年龄和与精神疾病患者的个人经历后各组之间的差异。
在对药物治疗效果的态度方面没有显著趋势。对看法和态度项目进行探索性因子分析确定了四个因子:(1)与精神疾病患者社交时的舒适度;(2)对精神疾病病因的非迷信看法;(3)对精神疾病患者的邻里情感;(4)认为压力和虐待是精神疾病病因一部分的看法。比较三组态度的协方差分析表明,在四个因子中的三个(1、2和4)上,完成了精神病学轮转的医学生得分显著高于未完成精神病学轮转的医学生。住院医师呈现出类似模式,在两个因子(1和4)上得分高于未完成精神病学轮转的医学生,但与完成了精神病学轮转的学生没有差异。
虽然医学生和住院医师在对药物疗效的看法上没有差异,但对精神疾病患者的污名化态度似乎受临床培训影响最大。精神病学教育,尤其是临床经验,会使对精神疾病患者的态度更加进步。