Pederson Aderonke Bamgbose, Konadu Fokuo J, Thornicroft Graham, Bamgbose Olamojiba, Ogunnubi Oluseun Peter, Ogunsola Kafayah, Oshodi Yewande O
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.
Transcult Psychiatry. 2023 Apr;60(2):272-285. doi: 10.1177/13634615211055007. Epub 2022 Jan 5.
Mental illness is a significant public health burden in low- and middle-income countries. A wide treatment gap in mental health care exists within the Nigerian health care system and this gap is worsened by the presence of stigma associated with mental illness, which leads to delay in treatment or acts as a barrier to any care. In this study, our aim was to understand the factors that underlie mental illness stigma in order to inform the design of effective stigma-reducing interventions among health care students in Nigeria. We conducted four focus groups among university health care students in March 2019 in Nigeria. The students included nursing, pharmacy, and medical trainees from a university teaching hospital. We used an inductive-driven thematic analysis to identify codes and themes related to mental health stigma and conceptualization of mental health within the study group. Among the 40 participants, we identified how specific interpretations of religious and spiritual beliefs may be associated with stigmatizing behaviors such as social distancing and discrimination. Conceptualization of mental illness as a communicable disease and the attribution of mental illness to a moral failing contributed to stigma mechanisms. Overall, eight themes associated with mental health stigma and mental health-related concepts were found: spirituality, discrimination and devaluation, conceptualization of mental health, attribution theories, methods to reduce stigma, shortage of resources, violence and dangerousness, and maltreatment. We found that the co-existence of spiritual beliefs and biomedical and psychological models of mental health is a key factor to consider in the design of effective stigma-reducing interventions among university health students in Nigeria.
在低收入和中等收入国家,精神疾病是一项重大的公共卫生负担。尼日利亚医疗保健系统存在着巨大的精神卫生保健治疗差距,而与精神疾病相关的污名化现象加剧了这一差距,导致治疗延误或成为任何护理的障碍。在本研究中,我们的目的是了解精神疾病污名化背后的因素,以便为尼日利亚医学生设计有效的减少污名化干预措施提供依据。2019年3月,我们在尼日利亚对大学医学生进行了四个焦点小组访谈。这些学生包括来自一所大学教学医院的护理、药学和医学实习生。我们采用归纳驱动的主题分析来识别与研究组内精神卫生污名化和心理健康概念化相关的代码和主题。在40名参与者中,我们确定了宗教和精神信仰的特定解释可能如何与诸如社会疏远和歧视等污名化行为相关联。将精神疾病概念化为传染病以及将精神疾病归因于道德缺陷促成了污名化机制。总体而言,发现了与精神卫生污名化和心理健康相关概念相关的八个主题:灵性、歧视与贬低、心理健康概念化、归因理论、减少污名化的方法、资源短缺、暴力与危险性以及虐待。我们发现,精神信仰与心理健康的生物医学和心理学模型并存是在尼日利亚大学健康学生中设计有效减少污名化干预措施时需要考虑的关键因素。