Psychiatric Stigma in Developing Societies

S. Shafti
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Stigmatizing attitudes toward persons with mental syndromes are prevalent in the general population and even among mental health professionals, a problem that may result easily in public avoidance, constant discrimination, and declined help-seeking behavior. The effect of stigma is twofold: Public stigma is the response that the public has to people with mental disorder. Self-stigma is the bigotry which persons with mental disorder turn against themselves. The WHO has advised that stigma is one of the largest barricades to treatment engagement, even if management is operative, even in low-income nations. While before and according to a series of researches the outcome of severe mental illness is generally better in developing societies than in developed countries, and it has been suggested that stigma is less severe or non-existent in unindustrialized nations, the current studies and observations do not confirm such an optimistic hint and the idea that stigma attached to mental illness is a global phenomenon seems a reasonable inference. In the present article, the issue of stigmatization, deinstitutionalization, national goal setting, and real situation of various modules of psychiatric rehabilitation, in the context of social or public psychiatry, especially in developing countries, is discussed, from a practical point of view.
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发展中社会的精神病污名
对精神综合症患者的污名化态度在一般人群中甚至在精神卫生专业人员中普遍存在,这一问题很容易导致公众回避、持续歧视和拒绝寻求帮助的行为。耻辱感的影响是双重的:公众耻辱感是公众对精神障碍患者的反应。自我耻辱是精神障碍患者对自己的偏见。世卫组织建议,污名是参与治疗的最大障碍之一,即使管理是有效的,即使在低收入国家也是如此。虽然之前和根据一系列研究,发展中社会的严重精神疾病的结果通常比发达国家好,并且有人认为,在非工业化国家,耻辱感不那么严重或不存在,但目前的研究和观察并没有证实这种乐观的暗示,与精神疾病相关的耻辱感是一种全球现象的想法似乎是一个合理的推论。在本文中,从实践的角度讨论了在社会或公共精神病学背景下,特别是在发展中国家,精神病康复的各种模块的污名化、去机构化、国家目标设定和实际情况。
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