Stigmatization as a barrier to accessing mental health services: An editorial

IF 1.4 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH Pub Date : 2023-04-03 DOI:10.1080/00207411.2023.2206283
Charlotte Hivet, E. Bui
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Abstract

Stigmatization of mental health problems is a major and worldwide concern that may prevent individuals suffering from mental health conditions from accessing the treatment they need. This issue of the International Journal of Mental Health (IJMH) features four papers reporting the impact of stigmatization on access to mental health care, in different regions of the globe. In a first publication, Choudhry et al. (2023) reviewed the barriers to accessing mental health care in Pakistan and found six studies reporting stigma as the main barrier to receiving mental health services. In another study, among N1⁄4 1,720 adult Ukrainians, Jiang et al. (2023) reported that increased religious beliefs were associated with decreased treatment seeking behavior. Further, among the treatment-seeking participants, weaker religious beliefs was associated with seeking alternative mental health treatments (as opposed to conventional treatments). In another study, Subu et al. (2023) reported in a qualitative study examining N1⁄4 25 Indonesian families that stigmatization also prevented patients from accessing conventional mental health care. Taken together, these two papers pointed out that one of the main determinants of stigmatization was cultural background. While it may be difficult (and even not desirable) to target cultural and/or religious beliefs in order to support destigmatization, there may be other ways to decrease perceived stigma and increase access to care among patients with mental health conditions. In a fourth study among N1⁄4 305 South-Korean university students, increased mental health literacy was in fact associated with decreased stigmatization (Kim, 2023), suggesting that targeting mental health literacy may be helpful to decrease self-stigma. In addition, this study also found that mental health literacy might improve treatment-seeking behaviors regardless of perceived stigma. It is important to note that in addition to barriers to mental health care, individuals with mental health conditions also face barriers to accessing non-psychiatric medical care, potentially through increased perceived stigma (Ostrow et al., 2014) and stigmatizing attitudes from health care professionals (Neauport et al., 2012). Clearly, interventions to promote access to mental health care as well as health care in general are needed both in developing and industrialized countries.
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污名化是获得心理健康服务的障碍:一篇社论
对心理健康问题的污名化是世界范围内关注的一个主要问题,可能会阻碍患有心理健康状况的个人获得所需的治疗。本期《国际心理健康杂志》刊登了四篇论文,报道了污名化对全球不同地区获得心理健康护理的影响。在第一份出版物中,Choudhry等人(2023)回顾了巴基斯坦获得心理健康护理的障碍,发现六项研究报告称污名是获得心理健康服务的主要障碍。在另一项研究中,在N1/41720名成年乌克兰人中,姜等人(2023)报告称,宗教信仰的增加与寻求治疗行为的减少有关。此外,在寻求治疗的参与者中,较弱的宗教信仰与寻求替代性心理健康治疗(与传统治疗相反)有关。在另一项研究中,Subu等人(2023)在一项针对N1/425印尼家庭的定性研究中报告称,污名化也阻碍了患者获得传统的心理健康护理。总之,这两篇论文指出,污名化的主要决定因素之一是文化背景。虽然针对文化和/或宗教信仰来支持消除污名化可能很困难(甚至不可取),但可能还有其他方法可以减少心理健康患者的污名感,增加他们获得护理的机会。在第四项针对N1/4305韩国大学生的研究中,心理健康素养的提高实际上与污名化的减少有关(Kim,2023),这表明针对心理健康素养可能有助于减少自我污名化。此外,这项研究还发现,心理健康素养可能会改善寻求治疗的行为,而不受污名的影响。值得注意的是,除了心理健康护理的障碍外,有心理健康状况的个人在获得非精神病医疗护理方面也面临障碍,这可能是由于人们对污名化的感知增加(Ostrow等人,2014)和医疗保健专业人员的污名化态度(Neauport等人,2012)。显然,发展中国家和工业化国家都需要采取干预措施,促进获得心理保健和一般保健服务。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
20.00%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: The official journal of the World Association for Psychosocial Rehabilitation, the International Journal of Mental Health features in-depth articles on research, clinical practice, and the organization and delivery of mental health services around the world. Covering both developed and developing countries, it provides vital information on important new ideas and trends in community mental health, social psychiatry, psychiatric epidemiology, prevention, treatment, and psychosocial rehabilitation.
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