School of Rehabilitation Science, McMaster University, ON, Canada.
Departments of Community Health Sciences and Psychiatry, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Can J Psychiatry. 2018 Dec;63(12):826-833. doi: 10.1177/0706743718766051. Epub 2018 Apr 19.
This study sought to evaluate whether a contact-based workplace education program was more effective than standard mental health literacy training in promoting early intervention and support for healthcare employees with mental health issues.
A parallel-group, randomised trial was conducted with employees in 2 multi-site Ontario hospitals with the evaluators blinded to the groups. Participants were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 group-based education programs: Beyond Silence (comprising 6 in-person, 2-h sessions plus 5 online sessions co-led by employees who personally experienced mental health issues) or Mental Health First Aid (a standardised 2-day training program led by a trained facilitator). Participants completed baseline, post-group, and 3-mo follow-up surveys to explore perceived changes in mental health knowledge, stigmatized beliefs, and help-seeking/help-outreach behaviours. An intent-to-treat analysis was completed with 192 participants. Differences were assessed using multi-level mixed models accounting for site, group, and repeated measurement.
Neither program led to significant increases in help-seeking or help-outreach behaviours. Both programs increased mental health literacy, improved attitudes towards seeking treatment, and decreased stigmatized beliefs, with sustained changes in stigmatized beliefs more prominent in the Beyond Silence group.
Beyond Silence, a new contact-based education program customised for healthcare workers was not superior to standard mental health literacy training in improving mental health help-seeking or help-outreach behaviours in the workplace. The only difference was a reduction in stigmatized beliefs over time. Additional research is needed to explore the factors that lead to behaviour change.
本研究旨在评估基于接触的职场教育计划是否比标准心理健康素养培训更能促进对有心理健康问题的医护人员的早期干预和支持。
在安大略省的 2 家多地点医院中进行了一项平行组随机试验,评估人员对组别的分组情况不知情。参与者被随机分配到 2 个基于小组的教育计划之一:超越沉默(包括 6 次面对面的 2 小时课程,外加由有心理健康问题的个人共同领导的 5 次在线课程)或心理健康急救(由经过培训的协调员领导的标准化 2 天培训计划)。参与者在基线、小组后和 3 个月随访时完成调查,以探索对心理健康知识、污名化信念和寻求帮助/提供帮助行为的感知变化。对 192 名参与者进行了意向治疗分析。使用多水平混合模型评估组间、组内和重复测量的差异。
没有任何一个计划导致寻求帮助或提供帮助的行为有显著增加。两个计划都提高了心理健康素养,改善了对治疗的态度,并减少了污名化的信念,而超越沉默组的污名化信念的持续变化更为明显。
超越沉默,一种为医护人员定制的新的基于接触的教育计划,在改善工作场所的心理健康寻求帮助或提供帮助行为方面并不优于标准的心理健康素养培训。唯一的区别是随着时间的推移,污名化的信念有所减少。需要进一步研究探索导致行为变化的因素。