Macfarlane Hannah, Paton Alexis, Bush Joseph
School of Pharmacy, College of Health and Life Sciences, Aston University, Birmingham B4 7ET, United Kingdom.
School of Social Sciences And Humanities, College Of Business And Social Sciences, Aston University, Birmingham B4 7ET, United Kingdom.
Curr Pharm Teach Learn. 2025 Mar;17(3):102271. doi: 10.1016/j.cptl.2024.102271. Epub 2024 Dec 26.
Mental illness stigma can result in discriminative practice in pharmacy, such as providing less pharmaceutical care to people living with mental illness (PMI) than those with physical illness. Pharmacy education should aim to reduce the impact of mental illness stigma on the pharmaceutical care of PMI. Whilst previous research has shown that some interventions can reduce stereotyping and prejudice in pharmacy students, the impact on subsequent discrimination is questionable and the reasons for successful and unsuccessful outcomes are unclear. This study aimed to explore pharmacy students' views on working with PMI and how these views might interact with mental illness stigma.
Focus groups and semi-structured interviews with final year pharmacy students and recent graduates were conducted at one UK university. Question guides were developed based on the aim of the study and investigated participants' attitudes and beliefs about mental illness. Following transcription, data were analysed in line with the guiding principles of constructivist Grounded Theory.
Three major categories were developed which accounted for the data: Knowing, Doing and Valuing. Participants reported that in common with the general public, pharmacy students possess insufficient knowledge about mental illness, which limits what can be done to help and support people living with it. Finally, participants reported that mental illness is ascribed insufficient value in the pharmacy curriculum, healthcare, and in wider society. Interactions between stigma and each of these categories were identified.
The findings offer a novel, qualitative description and explanation of mental illness stigma among pharmacy students from one UK university. Further, the factors identified by pharmacy students as modifiers of preparedness for professional practice provide an evidence base for curriculum development with possible international relevance. This may help pharmacy educators to develop evidence-based strategies aimed at reducing the impact of mental illness stigma in future professional practice.
精神疾病污名化可能导致药房中的歧视性做法,例如相较于身体疾病患者,为精神疾病患者提供的药学服务较少。药学教育应致力于减少精神疾病污名化对精神疾病患者药学服务的影响。虽然先前的研究表明,一些干预措施可以减少药学生的刻板印象和偏见,但对随后的歧视的影响值得怀疑,而且成功和不成功结果的原因尚不清楚。本研究旨在探讨药学生对与精神疾病患者合作的看法,以及这些看法可能如何与精神疾病污名化相互作用。
在英国一所大学对最后一年的药学生和应届毕业生进行了焦点小组和半结构化访谈。根据研究目的制定了问题指南,调查了参与者对精神疾病的态度和信念。转录后,根据建构主义扎根理论的指导原则对数据进行了分析。
形成了三个主要类别来解释数据:知晓、行动和重视。参与者报告说,与普通公众一样,药学生对精神疾病的了解不足,这限制了帮助和支持精神疾病患者的能力。最后,参与者报告说,精神疾病在药学课程、医疗保健以及更广泛的社会中未得到足够重视。确定了污名与这些类别中每一个之间的相互作用。
研究结果对一所英国大学药学生中的精神疾病污名化提供了新颖的定性描述和解释。此外,药学生确定的作为专业实践准备调节因素的因素为可能具有国际相关性的课程开发提供了证据基础。这可能有助于药学教育工作者制定基于证据的策略,以减少未来专业实践中精神疾病污名化的影响。