Institute for Medical Ethics and History of Medicine (Hempeler, Schneider-Reuter, Carlet, Philipsen, Gather) and Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Preventive Medicine (Juckel, Gather, Faissner), Ruhr University Bochum, Bochum, Germany; private practice for general medicine, Cologne, Germany (Windel); Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, Psychiatric University Hospital Zurich, University of Zurich, Zurich (Carlet); private practice for psychiatry and psychotherapy, and psychodynamic supervision, Cologne, Germany (Yeboah); Institute of the History of Medicine and Ethics in Medicine, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin (Faissner).
Psychiatr Serv. 2024 Nov 1;75(11):1125-1143. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.20230252. Epub 2024 Jun 28.
Discriminatory practices in mental health care undermine the right to health of marginalized service users. Intersectional approaches enable consideration of multiple forms of discrimination that occur simultaneously and remain invisible in single-axis analyses. The authors reviewed intersectionality-informed qualitative literature on discriminatory practices in mental health care to better understand the experiences of marginalized service users and their evaluation and navigation of mental health care.
The authors searched EBSCO, PubMed, MEDLINE, and JSTOR for studies published January 1, 1989-December 14, 2022. Qualitative and mixed-methods studies were eligible if they used an intersectional approach to examine discrimination (experiences, mechanisms, and coping strategies) in mental health care settings from the perspective of service users and providers. A qualitative evidence synthesis with thematic analysis was performed.
Fifteen studies were included in the qualitative evidence synthesis. These studies represented the experiences of 383 service users and 114 providers. Most studies considered the intersections of mental illness with race, sexual and gender diversity, or both and were performed in the United States or Canada. Four themes were identified: the relevance of social identity in mental health care settings, knowledge-related concerns in mental health care, microaggressions in clinical practice, and service users' responses to discriminatory practices.
Discriminatory practices in mental health care lead to specific barriers to care for multiply marginalized service users. Universities and hospitals may improve care by building competencies in recognizing and preventing discrimination through institutionalized training.
精神卫生保健中的歧视做法损害了边缘化服务使用者的健康权。交叉方法能够考虑同时发生且在单轴分析中不可见的多种形式的歧视。作者审查了关于精神卫生保健中歧视做法的交叉方法知情的定性文献,以更好地了解边缘化服务使用者的经历以及他们对精神卫生保健的评估和导航。
作者在 EBSCO、PubMed、MEDLINE 和 JSTOR 上搜索了 1989 年 1 月 1 日至 2022 年 12 月 14 日发表的研究。如果定性和混合方法研究使用交叉方法从服务使用者和提供者的角度检查精神卫生保健环境中的歧视(经历、机制和应对策略),则符合条件。进行了定性证据综合和主题分析。
纳入了 15 项定性证据综合研究。这些研究代表了 383 名服务使用者和 114 名提供者的经历。大多数研究考虑了精神疾病与种族、性和性别多样性或两者的交叉,并且在美国或加拿大进行。确定了四个主题:社会身份在精神卫生保健环境中的相关性、精神卫生保健中的知识相关问题、临床实践中的微侵犯以及服务使用者对歧视性做法的反应。
精神卫生保健中的歧视做法导致了多重边缘化服务使用者面临特定的护理障碍。大学和医院可以通过制度化培训建立识别和预防歧视的能力来改善护理。