Mental health stigma and discrimination in Ethiopia: evidence synthesis to inform stigma reduction interventions.

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY International Journal of Mental Health Systems Pub Date : 2022-06-23 DOI:10.1186/s13033-022-00540-z
Eshetu Girma, Bezawit Ketema, Tesfahun Mulatu, Brandon A Kohrt, Syed Shabab Wahid, Eva Heim, Petra C Gronholm, Charlotte Hanlon, Graham Thornicroft
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Abstract

Background: People with mental illnesses are at an increased risk of experiencing human rights violations, stigma and discrimination. Even though mental health stigma and discrimination are universal, there appears to be a higher burden in low- and middle-income countries. Anti-stigma interventions need to be grounded in local evidence. The aim of this paper was to synthesize evidence on mental health stigma and discrimination in Ethiopia to inform the development of anti-stigma interventions.

Methods: This evidence synthesis was conducted as a part of formative work for the International Study of Discrimination and Stigma Outcomes (INDIGO) Partnership research program. Electronic searches were conducted using PubMed for scientific articles, and Google Search and Google Scholar were used for grey literature. Records fulfilling eligibility criteria were selected for the evidence synthesis. The findings were synthesized using a framework designed to capture features of mental health stigma to inform cultural adaptation of anti-stigma interventions.

Results: A total of 37 records (2 grey literature and 35 scientific articles) were included in the evidence synthesis. Some of these records were described more than once depending on themes of the synthesis. The records were synthesized under the themes of explanatory models of stigma (3 records on labels and 4 records on symptoms and causes), perceived and experienced forms of stigma (7 records on public stigma, 6 records on structural stigma, 2 records on courtesy stigma and 4 records on self-stigma), impact of stigma on help-seeking (6 records) and interventions to reduce stigma (12 records). Only two intervention studies assessed stigma reduction- one study showed reduced discrimination due to improved access to effective mental health care, whereas the other study did not find evidence on reduction of discrimination following a community-based rehabilitation intervention in combination with facility-based care.

Conclusion: There is widespread stigma and discrimination in Ethiopia which has contributed to under-utilization of available mental health services in the country. This should be addressed with contextually designed and effective stigma reduction interventions that engage stakeholders (service users, service providers, community representatives and service developers and policy makers) so that the United Nations universal health coverage goal for mental health can be achieved in Ethiopia.

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埃塞俄比亚的心理健康污名化和歧视:为减少污名化干预措施提供信息的证据综述。
背景:精神疾病患者遭受人权侵犯、羞辱和歧视的风险越来越大。尽管心理健康耻辱化和歧视是普遍现象,但中低收入国家的负担似乎更重。反污名化干预措施需要以当地证据为基础。本文旨在综合埃塞俄比亚心理健康羞辱与歧视方面的证据,为制定反羞辱干预措施提供参考:本证据综述是 "国际歧视与污名化结果研究(INDIGO)合作研究计划 "形成性工作的一部分。使用 PubMed 对科学文章进行电子检索,使用 Google Search 和 Google Scholar 对灰色文献进行检索。符合资格标准的记录被选中用于证据综合。研究结果通过一个旨在捕捉心理健康污名化特征的框架进行综合,为反污名化干预措施的文化适应性提供依据:共有 37 条记录(2 篇灰色文献和 35 篇科学文章)被纳入证据综述。根据综述的主题,其中一些记录被描述了不止一次。这些记录按照以下主题进行了综合:成见的解释模型(3 条关于标签的记录、4 条关于症状和原因的记录)、可感知和可经历的成见形式(7 条关于公众成见、6 条关于结构性成见、2 条关于礼节性成见、4 条关于自我成见)、成见对求助的影响(6 条记录)以及减少成见的干预措施(12 条记录)。只有两项干预研究对减少成见进行了评估--一项研究显示,由于获得有效精神健康护理的机会增加,歧视现象有所减少;而另一项研究则没有发现证据表明,在社区康复干预与设施护理相结合后,歧视现象有所减少:结论:埃塞俄比亚普遍存在污名化和歧视现象,导致该国现有的心理健康服务利用率不足。要解决这个问题,就应该根据具体情况设计有效的减少污名化干预措施,让利益相关者(服务使用者、服务提供者、社区代表、服务开发者和政策制定者)参与进来,这样才能在埃塞俄比亚实现联合国精神卫生全民医保的目标。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
2.80%
发文量
52
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊最新文献
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