Jones Norman, Whybrow D, Coetzee R
Academic Department of Military Mental Health, Ministry of Defence, Weston Education Centre, London, UK.
School of Healthcare Sciences, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK.
J R Army Med Corps. 2018 Aug;164(4):259-266. doi: 10.1136/jramc-2018-000928. Epub 2018 Mar 9.
Studies suggest that medical doctors can suffer from substantial levels of mental ill-health. Little is known about military doctors' mental health and well-being; we therefore assessed attitudes to mental health, self-stigma, psychological distress and help-seeking among UK Armed Forces doctors.
Six hundred and seventy-eight military doctors (response rate 59%) completed an anonymous online survey. Comparisons were made with serving and ex-military personnel (n=1448, response rate 84.5%) participating in a mental health-related help-seeking survey. Basic sociodemographic data were gathered, and participants completed measures of mental health-related stigmatisation, perceived barriers to care and the 12-Item General Health Questionnaire. All participants were asked if in the last three years they had experienced stress, emotional, mental health, alcohol, family or relationship problems, and whether they had sought help from formal sources.
Military doctors reported fewer mental disorder symptoms than the comparison groups. They endorsed higher levels of stigmatising beliefs, negative attitudes to mental healthcare, desire to self-manage and self-stigmatisation than each of the comparison groups. They were most concerned about potential negative effects of and peer perceptions about receiving a mental disorder diagnosis. Military doctors reporting historical and current relationship, and alcohol or mental health problems were significantly and substantially less likely to seek help than the comparison groups.
Although there are a number of study limitations, outcomes suggest that UK military doctors report lower levels of mental disorder symptoms, higher levels of stigmatising beliefs and a lower propensity to seek formal support than other military reference groups.
研究表明,医生可能会出现严重的心理健康问题。对于军医的心理健康和幸福感知之甚少;因此,我们评估了英国武装部队医生对心理健康的态度、自我污名化、心理困扰和寻求帮助的情况。
678名军医(回复率59%)完成了一项匿名在线调查。与参与一项与心理健康相关的寻求帮助调查的现役和退役军人(n = 1448,回复率84.5%)进行了比较。收集了基本的社会人口统计学数据,参与者完成了与心理健康污名化、感知到的护理障碍以及12项一般健康问卷相关的测量。所有参与者被问及在过去三年中他们是否经历过压力、情绪、心理健康、酒精、家庭或人际关系问题,以及他们是否从正规渠道寻求过帮助。
军医报告的精神障碍症状比对照组少。与每个对照组相比,他们认可更高水平的污名化信念、对心理保健的负面态度、自我管理的愿望和自我污名化。他们最担心接受精神障碍诊断的潜在负面影响以及同伴的看法。报告有历史和当前人际关系、酒精或心理健康问题的军医比对照组寻求帮助的可能性显著降低。
尽管有一些研究局限性,但结果表明,与其他军事参考群体相比,英国军医报告的精神障碍症状水平较低,污名化信念水平较高,寻求正式支持的倾向较低。