Dabby Layla, Tranulis Constantin, Kirmayer Laurence J
Psychiatrist, Sir Mortimer B Davis Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Quebec; Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec.
Psychiatrist, Institut universitaire en santé mentale de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec; Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec.
Can J Psychiatry. 2015 Oct;60(10):451-9. doi: 10.1177/070674371506001006.
People with mental illness suffer stigma and discrimination across various contexts, including the health care setting, and clinicians' attitudes play an important role in perpetuating stigma. Effective stigma-reduction interventions for physicians require a better understanding of explicit (that is, conscious and controllable) and implicit (that is, subconscious and automatic) forms of bias, and of predictors and moderators of stigma.
Members of a Canadian university psychiatry department and of the Canadian Psychiatric Association (CPA) were invited to participate in a web-based study consisting of 2 measures of explicit attitudes, the Social Distance Scale (SDS) and the Opening Minds Scale for Health Care Providers (OMS-HC), and 1 measure of implicit attitudes, the Implicit Association Test (IAT).
Thirty-five psychiatry residents and 68 psychiatrists completed the study (response rates of 12.1% for the university sample and 3.3% for the CPA sample). Participants desired greater social distance from the vignette patient with schizophrenia. Mean IAT scores, although negative, did not reach the threshold for a meaningful effect size. Patient contact positively predicted IAT scores, while age, sex, and level of training (resident, compared with psychiatrist) did not. Neither patient contact nor implicit attitudes predicted SDS or OMS-HC scores.
Psychiatrists did not differ from psychiatry residents on any measures of explicit or implicit attitudes toward mental illness. Explicit attitudes toward people with mental illness were relatively negative; implicit attitudes were neither negative nor positive; and implicit and explicit attitudes were not correlated. Greater patient contact predicted more positive implicit attitudes, but did not predict explicit attitudes.
患有精神疾病的人在包括医疗环境在内的各种情况下都遭受耻辱和歧视,而临床医生的态度在使耻辱长期存在方面起着重要作用。针对医生的有效减少耻辱干预措施需要更好地理解显性(即有意识且可控的)和隐性(即潜意识且自动的)偏见形式,以及耻辱的预测因素和调节因素。
邀请加拿大一所大学精神病学系的成员和加拿大精神病学协会(CPA)的成员参与一项基于网络的研究,该研究包括两项显性态度测量,即社会距离量表(SDS)和医疗保健提供者开放思维量表(OMS-HC),以及一项隐性态度测量,即内隐联想测验(IAT)。
35名精神病学住院医师和68名精神科医生完成了研究(大学样本的回复率为12.1%,CPA样本的回复率为3.3%)。参与者希望与患有精神分裂症的 vignette 患者保持更大的社会距离。平均IAT分数虽然为负,但未达到有意义效应大小的阈值。与患者的接触能正向预测IAT分数,而年龄、性别和培训水平(住院医师与精神科医生相比)则不能。与患者的接触和隐性态度均不能预测SDS或OMS-HC分数。
在对精神疾病的显性或隐性态度的任何测量上,精神科医生与精神病学住院医师没有差异。对患有精神疾病的人的显性态度相对消极;隐性态度既不消极也不积极;显性和隐性态度不相关。与患者更多的接触预测了更积极的隐性态度,但不能预测显性态度。