Solbakken Line Elisabeth, Bergvik Svein, Wynn Rolf
Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø, Norway.
Division of Mental Health and Substance Use, University Hospital of North Norway, Tromsø, Norway.
Front Psychiatry. 2023 Sep 14;14:1242756. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1242756. eCollection 2023.
Beliefs about mental health are shaped by the sociocultural context. Prisons have unique environmental and social features, and the prevalence of mental health problems in incarcerated populations is exceptionally high. These features make prisons especially interesting settings for exploring health beliefs. The aim of this study was to explore the conceptualizations of mental health and coping preferences in a prison environment.
Individual in-depth interviews were conducted with fifteen incarcerated males from three prisons in Northern Norway. The design draws on central elements from Grounded Theory.
Mental health was perceived as distinct from mental illness by many of the participants. They coped with the prison environment by focusing on the things that gave them a sense of meaning and autonomy - this also formed their conceptualization of mental health. Furthermore, social interaction and activities were perceived as important to enhance and maintain mental well-being, however there were institutional barriers to using these coping strategies. The prison environment was integrated in the participants conceptualizations of mental health problems, and psychosocial stressors were emphasized in causal attributions. Biological and dispositional factors were less frequently mentioned. The participants preferred non-medical management for mental health problems and most displayed a reserved attitude towards psychotropic medications. The exception was attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, for which they held neurobiological causal beliefs, together with a corresponding preference for medication as treatment.
The main finding was a firm integration of the prison context in in the participants' beliefs about mental health. We theorize that fusion of prison conditions and mental health beliefs were brought on by the processes of prisonization, observing mental distress in peers and attempts to protect self-esteem by externalizing the causes for mental health problems. Access to activities, social time, and "someone to talk to" were perceived to be crucial for improving and preserving mental health.
关于心理健康的观念受到社会文化背景的影响。监狱具有独特的环境和社会特征,被监禁人群中心理健康问题的患病率极高。这些特征使监狱成为探索健康观念特别有趣的场所。本研究的目的是探讨监狱环境中对心理健康的概念化以及应对偏好。
对挪威北部三所监狱的15名被监禁男性进行了个人深度访谈。该设计借鉴了扎根理论的核心要素。
许多参与者认为心理健康与精神疾病不同。他们通过关注能给他们带来意义感和自主感的事情来应对监狱环境——这也形成了他们对心理健康的概念化。此外,社交互动和活动被认为对增进和维持心理健康很重要,然而使用这些应对策略存在制度障碍。监狱环境融入了参与者对心理健康问题的概念化中,并且在因果归因中强调了心理社会压力源。生物和性格因素较少被提及。参与者更喜欢对心理健康问题进行非药物管理,并且大多数人对精神药物持保留态度。注意力缺陷多动障碍是个例外,他们对其持有神经生物学因果信念,并相应地倾向于使用药物进行治疗。
主要发现是监狱环境在参与者对心理健康的信念中紧密融合。我们推测,监狱化过程、观察同伴的精神痛苦以及通过将心理健康问题的原因外化来保护自尊的尝试导致了监狱条件与心理健康信念的融合。获得活动、社交时间和“能交谈的人”被认为对改善和保持心理健康至关重要。