Department of Psychiatry, George Emil Palade University of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science, and Technology of Targu Mures, Tirgu-Mures, Romania.
Department of Health Service and Population Research, King's College London Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, London, UK.
BMC Psychiatry. 2023 Sep 8;23(1):662. doi: 10.1186/s12888-023-05147-3.
Stigma related to mental illness is increasingly and more effectively addressed. Although more research is being conducted, there is relatively little from low and middle-income countries, with former Soviet bloc countries identified as a particular contributor to this evidence gap. Romania struggles with mental health stigma at many levels. The aim of this review was to bring together all relevant data regarding stigma and discrimination related to mental illness as well as actions to address these problems in Romania in order to prioritise further stigma research and identify priority targets for stigma reduction.
A systematic literature search was conducted in three online databases and grey literature. After the analysis of full manuscripts, four were excluded based on lack of relevance or incomplete data reporting. Quality assessment was performed for included studies using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool (MMAT) and the narrative was synthesized based on the research questions.
The review included fifteen studies, the majority having a cross-sectional design. Stigma related to mental illness in Romania, has an impact on help-seeking attitudes and behaviours, workplace environment and social relationships of people with mental health problems. Negative stereotypes are maintained and validated by mass media reports. Significant stigma in healthcare and mental care settings has also been observed. Self-stigma was less frequently reported than public stigma. Despite a few stigma reduction actions, no rigorous evaluation of content, delivery and effectiveness has been conducted and no empirical evidence has been published.
Based on this review, three lines of action are recommended in Romania. Increase research concerning stigma in healthcare and mental care settings and use behavioural outcomes. Develop and deliver evidence-based tailored interventions to reduce stigma in identified priority subgroups of the population and ensure rigorous evaluation and scientific dissemination. Elaborate guidelines for working with community stigma and advocate for structural changes.
与精神疾病相关的污名化问题日益受到关注,并得到了更有效的解决。尽管越来越多的研究正在进行,但来自中低收入国家的研究相对较少,前苏联集团国家被认为是造成这一证据差距的主要原因。罗马尼亚在精神卫生污名化方面面临着诸多挑战。本研究旨在汇集罗马尼亚与精神疾病相关的污名和歧视问题以及解决这些问题的所有相关数据,以便为进一步的污名研究确定重点,并确定减少污名的优先目标。
我们在三个在线数据库和灰色文献中进行了系统的文献检索。在分析完整的手稿后,根据相关性或数据报告不完整,排除了其中的 4 篇。使用混合方法评估工具(MMAT)对纳入的研究进行质量评估,并根据研究问题对叙述进行综合。
本综述共纳入 15 项研究,其中大部分为横断面设计。罗马尼亚的精神疾病污名问题对寻求帮助的态度和行为、工作场所环境以及精神健康问题患者的社会关系产生了影响。大众媒体的报道维持并证实了负面的刻板印象。在医疗保健和精神保健环境中也观察到了显著的污名化现象。自我污名化的报道比公众污名化的报道要少。尽管采取了一些减少污名的措施,但这些措施的内容、实施和效果均未经过严格评估,也没有发表过任何实证证据。
基于本综述,建议罗马尼亚采取以下三项行动。增加医疗保健和精神保健环境中污名问题的研究,并采用行为结果。针对特定人群制定和实施基于证据的针对性干预措施,以减少确定的重点人群的污名化,并确保严格的评估和科学传播。制定针对社区污名化的工作指南,并倡导进行结构性改革。