Title of article :
Sri Lankan doctors’ and medical undergraduates’ attitudes
towards mental illness
Author/Authors :
Sunera Mayanthi Fernando، نويسنده , , Frank P. Deane ?
Hamish J. McLeod، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
Background Stigmatizing attitudes towards mental illness
can impede help-seeking and adversely affect treatment
outcomes, especially if such attitudes are endorsed by
medical personnel. In order to help identify targets for antistigma
interventions, we comprehensively examined negative
attitudes towards mental illness displayed by Sri
Lankan doctors and medical students and compared these
with equivalent UK and other international data.
Method A self-report questionnaire originally developed
in the UK was completed by medical students (n = 574) and
doctors (n = 74) from a teaching hospital in Colombo. The
questions assessed the presence and intensity of stigmatizing
attitudes towards patients with schizophrenia, depression,
panic disorder, dementia and drug and alcohol addiction.
Results The study revealed higher levels of stigma
towards patients with depression, alcohol and drug addiction
in this Sri Lankan sample compared to UK data but
attitudes towards schizophrenia were less stigmatized in Sri
Lanka. Blaming attitudes were consistently high across
diagnoses in the Sri Lankan sample. Sri Lankan medical
students displayed more negative attitudes than doctors
(P\0.001). Overall stigma was greatest towards patients
with drug addiction, followed by, alcohol addiction,
schizophrenia, depression, panic disorder and dementia.
Conclusions Sri Lankan doctors and undergraduates
endorse stigmatizing attitudes towards mental illnesses and
are especially prone to see patients as blameworthy. As
such attitudes are likely to affect the engagement of
patients in treatment and specific interventions that modify
negative attitudes towards people with mental illnesses are
needed. Ensuring that medical students have contact with
recovered patients in community psychiatry settings may
be one way of decreasing stigmatizing attitudes
Keywords :
Stigma Mental illness Medical students Doctors Medical education
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)