Sukhera Javeed, Miller Kristina, Milne Alexandra, Scerbo Christina, Lim Rodrick, Cooper Alicia, Watling Chris
Department of Psychiatry, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.
Centre for Education Research and Innovation, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.
Perspect Med Educ. 2017 Jun;6(3):165-172. doi: 10.1007/s40037-017-0333-5.
Stigmatizing attitudes and behaviours towards patients with mental illness have negative consequences on their health. Despite research regarding educational and social contact-based interventions to reduce stigma, there are limitations to the success of these interventions for individuals with deeply held stigmatizing beliefs. Our study sought to better understand the process of implicit mental illness stigma in the setting of a paediatric emergency department to inform the design of future educational interventions.
We conducted a qualitative exploration of mental illness stigma with interviews including physician, nurse, service user, caregiver and administrative staff participants (n = 24). We utilized the implicit association test as a discussion prompt to explore stigma outside of conscious awareness. We conducted our study utilizing constructivist grounded theory methodology, including purposeful theoretical sampling and constant comparative analysis.
Our study found that the confluence of socio-cultural, cognitive and emotional forces results in labelling of patients with mental illness as time-consuming, unpredictable and/or unfixable. These labels lead to unintentional avoidance behaviours from staff which are perceived as prejudicial and discriminatory by patients and caregivers. Participants emphasized education as the most useful intervention to reduce stigma, suggesting that educational interventions should focus on patient-provider relationships to foster humanizing labels for individuals with mental illness and by promoting provider empathy and engagement.
Our results suggest that educational interventions that target negative attributions, consider socio-cultural contexts and facilitate positive emotions in healthcare providers may be useful. Our findings may inform further research and interventions to reduce stereotypes towards marginalized groups in healthcare settings.
对患有精神疾病的患者持有污名化态度和行为会对他们的健康产生负面影响。尽管有关于基于教育和社会接触的干预措施以减少污名化的研究,但对于那些持有根深蒂固的污名化信念的个体而言,这些干预措施的成效存在局限性。我们的研究旨在更好地理解儿科急诊科背景下隐性精神疾病污名化的过程,以为未来教育干预措施的设计提供参考。
我们通过访谈对精神疾病污名化进行了定性探索,访谈对象包括医生、护士、服务使用者、护理人员和行政人员(n = 24)。我们利用内隐联想测验作为讨论提示,以探索意识之外的污名化。我们采用建构主义扎根理论方法进行研究,包括有目的的理论抽样和持续比较分析。
我们的研究发现,社会文化、认知和情感力量的交汇导致将患有精神疾病的患者贴上耗时、不可预测和/或无法治愈的标签。这些标签导致工作人员无意间的回避行为,而患者和护理人员会将其视为偏见和歧视。参与者强调教育是减少污名化最有用的干预措施,建议教育干预应侧重于医患关系,为患有精神疾病的个体塑造人性化的标签,并促进医护人员的同理心和参与度。
我们的结果表明,针对负面归因、考虑社会文化背景并促进医护人员产生积极情绪的教育干预措施可能会有帮助。我们的研究结果可为进一步的研究和干预措施提供参考,以减少医疗环境中对边缘化群体的刻板印象。