Daraz Umar, Bojnec Štefan, Khan Younas, Hussain Zakir
Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Malakand, Chakdara, Pakistan.
Faculty of Management, University of Primorska, Koper-Capodistria, Slovenia.
Front Psychiatry. 2025 Aug 20;16:1560460. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1560460. eCollection 2025.
Mental health stigma remains a major barrier to accessing psychiatric care worldwide, with pronounced effects in culturally traditional societies such as Peshawar, Pakistan. In the Pashtun cultural context, the code of Pashtunwali-an honor-based system-shapes social attitudes and behaviors, potentially influencing mental health help-seeking patterns. This study examines how cultural narratives, social norms, and stigma interact to affect help-seeking behavior in this sociocultural setting.
A cross-sectional survey was conducted among a stratified random sample of 400 adults aged 19 years and above in Peshawar. Data were collected using culturally validated instruments, including the Mental Illness Stigma Scale (MISS) and a Social Norms Scale. Bivariate analyses employed simple linear regression and binary logistic regression to examine individual relationships between variables. Multivariate analyses, including multiple linear regression and Structural Equation Modeling (SEM), were used to assess combined effects and mediation pathways.
Cultural narratives had a positive impact on help-seeking behavior, explaining 42% of its variance. Stigma showed a significant negative association, decreasing help-seeking likelihood by 26% for each unit increase. Social norms demonstrated a positive association with help-seeking behavior and indirectly reduced stigma. Collectively, these variables accounted for 68% of the variance in help-seeking likelihood.
The findings highlight the pivotal role of culturally resonant narratives and supportive social norms rooted in Pashtunwali in improving mental health service utilization. Addressing stigma while reinforcing positive cultural frameworks can substantially enhance help-seeking behavior in Peshawar and similar sociocultural contexts.
心理健康污名化仍然是全球范围内获得精神科护理的主要障碍,在巴基斯坦白沙瓦等文化传统社会中影响尤为显著。在普什图文化背景下,基于荣誉的普什图瓦里法典塑造了社会态度和行为,可能会影响心理健康求助模式。本研究探讨了文化叙事、社会规范和污名化如何相互作用,以影响这种社会文化背景下的求助行为。
在白沙瓦对400名19岁及以上成年人的分层随机样本进行了横断面调查。使用经过文化验证的工具收集数据,包括精神疾病污名量表(MISS)和社会规范量表。双变量分析采用简单线性回归和二元逻辑回归来检验变量之间的个体关系。多变量分析,包括多元线性回归和结构方程模型(SEM),用于评估综合效应和中介途径。
文化叙事对求助行为有积极影响,解释了其42%的方差。污名化显示出显著的负相关,每增加一个单位,求助可能性降低26%。社会规范与求助行为呈正相关,并间接减少了污名化。总体而言,这些变量占求助可能性方差的68%。
研究结果突出了源于普什图瓦里的具有文化共鸣的叙事和支持性社会规范在改善心理健康服务利用方面的关键作用。在强化积极文化框架的同时解决污名化问题,可以大幅提高白沙瓦及类似社会文化背景下的求助行为。