Yu Shelly, Kowitt Sarah D, Fisher Edwin B, Li Gongying
Peers for Progress and Department of Health Behavior, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Rosenau Hall, CB #7440, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599-7440, USA.
School of Mental Health and Institute of Behavioral Medicine, Jining Medical University, No. 16 Hehua Rd. Taibaihu New District, Jining, 272067, Shandong, China.
Community Ment Health J. 2018 Aug;54(6):757-764. doi: 10.1007/s10597-017-0182-z. Epub 2017 Nov 28.
Some people with mental illness in China do not receive treatment. We explored how stigma and familial obligation influenced accessibility of social support for patients with depression in China and the potential acceptability of peer support programs. Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with five psychiatrists and 16 patients receiving care for depression from a large psychiatric hospital in Jining, Shandong Province of China. Patients with mental illness reported barriers that prevented them from (a) receiving treatment and (b) relying on informal social support from family members, including stigma, somatization, and community norms. Circumventing these barriers, peer support (i.e., support from others with depression) was viewed by patients as an acceptable means of exchanging information and relying on others for support. Formative research on peer support programs to examine programming and activities may help reduce the burden of unmet mental health care needs in China.
在中国,一些患有精神疾病的人没有接受治疗。我们探讨了耻辱感和家庭义务如何影响中国抑郁症患者获得社会支持的机会,以及同伴支持项目的潜在可接受性。我们对来自中国山东省济宁市一家大型精神病医院的五名精神科医生和16名接受抑郁症治疗的患者进行了半结构化定性访谈。患有精神疾病的患者报告了阻碍他们(a)接受治疗和(b)依靠家庭成员提供非正式社会支持的障碍,包括耻辱感、躯体化和社区规范。为了规避这些障碍,同伴支持(即来自其他抑郁症患者的支持)被患者视为一种可接受的信息交流方式和依靠他人获得支持的方式。对同伴支持项目进行形成性研究以检查项目规划和活动,可能有助于减轻中国未满足的精神卫生保健需求的负担。