Impact of a Virtual Reality Intervention on Stigma, Empathy, and Attitudes Toward Patients With Psychotic Disorders Among Mental Health Care Professionals: Randomized Controlled Trial.

IF 4.8 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY Jmir Mental Health Pub Date : 2025-01-21 DOI:10.2196/66925
Jing Ling Tay, Yuanrong Qu, Lucas Lim, Rohan Puthran, Chye Lee Robert Tan, Rajkirren Rajendran, Ker Chiah Wei, Huiting Xie, Kang Sim
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Abstract

Background: Previous studies have found that psychotic disorders are among the most stigmatized mental disorders. Of note, virtual reality (VR) interventions have been associated with improvements in attitudes and empathy and reduced stigma toward individuals with psychotic disorders, especially among undergraduates, but this has not been examined among mental health care professionals.

Objective: We aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a newly developed VR intervention for mental health care professionals to improve attitudes and empathy and reduce stigma toward people with psychotic disorders.

Methods: We conducted a randomized controlled trial and recruited eligible mental health care professionals from a tertiary mental health care institution. Both arms (VR intervention and VR control groups) were evaluated at baseline, postintervention, and 1-month follow up. The evaluation included outcomes related to attitudes (modified attitudes toward people with schizophrenia scale), stigma (social distance scale, personal stigma scale), and empathy (empathetic concern subscale of the Interpersonal Reactivity Index). The experience with the VR intervention was assessed using a user satisfaction questionnaire, and qualitative feedback was gathered.

Results: Overall, 180 mental health care professionals participated and completed the study. Both groups showed improvements in attitude, social distance, and stigma scores but not the empathy score following the intervention. The VR intervention group had better user satisfaction than the VR control group. In addition, certain outcome measures were positively associated with specific factors including female gender, higher education level, certain job roles, years of work, and presence of loved ones with a mental disorder.

Conclusions: Both the intervention and control VR groups of mental health care professionals showed improvements in attitudes, stigma, and social distance toward people with psychotic disorders. Future longitudinal studies may want to evaluate the impact of VR on caregivers and the public on these same and other outcome measures to reduce stigma and improve empathy toward individuals with psychotic disorders.

Trial registration: clinicaltrials.gov NCT05982548; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05982548.

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虚拟现实干预对精神卫生保健专业人员对精神病患者的污名、共情和态度的影响:随机对照试验
背景:以往的研究发现,精神障碍是最容易被污名化的精神障碍之一。值得注意的是,虚拟现实(VR)干预与态度和同理心的改善有关,并减少了对精神病患者的耻辱感,尤其是在大学生中,但这还没有在精神卫生保健专业人员中进行过研究。目的:我们旨在评估新开发的虚拟现实干预对精神卫生保健专业人员改善精神障碍患者的态度和同理心并减少耻辱感的有效性。方法:我们进行了一项随机对照试验,并从一家三级精神卫生保健机构招募了符合条件的精神卫生保健专业人员。两组(VR干预组和VR对照组)在基线、干预后和1个月随访时进行评估。评估包括态度(对精神分裂症患者的修正态度量表)、耻感(社会距离量表、个人耻感量表)和共情(人际反应指数的共情关注子量表)相关的结果。使用用户满意度问卷评估虚拟现实干预的体验,并收集定性反馈。结果:总共有180名精神卫生保健专业人员参与并完成了这项研究。干预后,两组在态度、社会距离和污名得分上都有所改善,但在共情得分上没有改善。虚拟现实干预组用户满意度高于虚拟现实对照组。此外,某些结果测量与特定因素正相关,包括女性性别、高等教育水平、某些工作角色、工作年限和患有精神障碍的亲人。结论:干预组和对照组的精神卫生保健专业人员对精神障碍患者的态度、耻辱感和社会距离都有所改善。未来的纵向研究可能想要评估虚拟现实对护理人员和公众的影响,以减少对精神病患者的耻辱感,提高对精神病患者的同理心。试验注册:clinicaltrials.gov NCT05982548;https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05982548。
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来源期刊
Jmir Mental Health
Jmir Mental Health Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
10.80
自引率
3.80%
发文量
104
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: JMIR Mental Health (JMH, ISSN 2368-7959) is a PubMed-indexed, peer-reviewed sister journal of JMIR, the leading eHealth journal (Impact Factor 2016: 5.175). JMIR Mental Health focusses on digital health and Internet interventions, technologies and electronic innovations (software and hardware) for mental health, addictions, online counselling and behaviour change. This includes formative evaluation and system descriptions, theoretical papers, review papers, viewpoint/vision papers, and rigorous evaluations.
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