Meenu Sai, Kattimani Shivanand, Premarajan K C, Raghavan Bitty, Madhusoodanan Swathy, Bhattacharya Debajyoti, Thulasingam Mahalakshmy
Department of Preventive and Social Medicine, JIPMER, Puducherry, India.
Department of Psychiatry, JIPMER, Puducherry, India.
Indian J Psychiatry. 2025 Aug;67(8):770-778. doi: 10.4103/indianjpsychiatry_711_24. Epub 2025 Aug 15.
Mental health is a global priority concern. The vast majority of people lack the ability to recognize mental illness and tend to have poor knowledge and attitude toward them. Help-seeking preferences even for common mental disorders remain unsatisfactory.
To assess the mental health literacy level and health-seeking preferences for common mental disorders among adults above 18 years residing in rural and urban Puducherry.
A cross-sectional explanatory mixed-method study was conducted, incorporating both quantitative and qualitative approaches. The quantitative component utilized a structured questionnaire administered through a multistage cluster random sampling technique. The Mental Health Literacy Scale (MHLS), comprising 35 items across six attributes, along with seven case vignettes, was employed to assess participants' ability to recognize common mental disorders and their preferences for health-seeking. The qualitative component involved two focus group discussions-one in a rural setting and one in an urban setting conducted using a mini-ethnographic approach.
A total of 230 participants were surveyed. Responses to the survey indicated an average to poor level of mental health literacy (89.6%). There is adequate knowledge of professional help availability (73%) and where to seek information through resources such as general practitioners, friends, and Internet. However, most participants were inclined to hide (80%) their mental illness due to stigma. Only 14.3% and 9.4% could recognize generalized anxiety disorder and depression as mental illnesses, respectively. In the qualitative part, personal, family, social, and health system factors were identified as barriers to seek professional help for mental illness. The major barriers noted were trust in traditional/faith healers, stigma, low awareness, lack of trust, and confidentiality in the government sector.
Mental health literacy among adults was inadequate, and they were unable to recognize common mental health disorders. Professional health-seeking behavior was low due to misconceptions, stigma, and lack of trust in the health system.
心理健康是全球重点关注的问题。绝大多数人缺乏识别精神疾病的能力,并且对精神疾病的了解和态度往往较差。即使对于常见精神障碍,寻求帮助的偏好也不尽人意。
评估居住在本地治里城乡的18岁以上成年人对常见精神障碍的心理健康素养水平和寻求健康的偏好。
进行了一项横断面解释性混合方法研究,纳入了定量和定性方法。定量部分采用通过多阶段整群随机抽样技术管理的结构化问卷。心理健康素养量表(MHLS)由六个属性的35个项目以及七个病例 vignettes 组成,用于评估参与者识别常见精神障碍的能力及其寻求健康的偏好。定性部分涉及两次焦点小组讨论——一次在农村环境中,一次在城市环境中,采用小型人种志方法进行。
共调查了230名参与者。调查结果表明心理健康素养水平平均至较差(89.6%)。对专业帮助可用性(73%)以及通过全科医生、朋友和互联网等资源何处寻求信息有足够的了解。然而,由于耻辱感,大多数参与者倾向于隐瞒(80%)他们的精神疾病。只有14.3%和9.4%的人分别能够将广泛性焦虑症和抑郁症识别为精神疾病。在定性部分,个人、家庭、社会和卫生系统因素被确定为寻求精神疾病专业帮助的障碍。指出的主要障碍是对传统/信仰治疗师的信任、耻辱感、意识淡薄、缺乏信任以及政府部门的保密性。
成年人的心理健康素养不足,他们无法识别常见的心理健康障碍。由于误解、耻辱感和对卫生系统缺乏信任,专业的寻求健康行为较低。