在加纳完成世界卫生组织质量权电子培训后,对精神疾病患者和社会心理、智力或认知障碍患者的人权相关态度变化的定量分析。

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY International Journal of Mental Health Systems Pub Date : 2023-12-05 DOI:10.1186/s13033-023-00609-3
Emma Poynton-Smith, Martin Orrell, Akwasi Osei, Sally-Ann Ohene, Joana Ansong, Leveana Gyimah, Caitlin McKenzie, Maria Francesca Moro, Nathalie Drew-Bold, Florence Baingana, Mauro Giovanni Carta, Priscilla Tawiah, Kwaku Brobbey, Michelle Funk
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:尽管基本人权得到越来越多的认可,但众所周知,精神疾病患者以及社会心理、智力或认知障碍患者的权利在世界各地的精神卫生保健中经常受到侵犯,胁迫性做法被普遍使用,人们行使法律行为能力的权利以及在治疗和其他影响自身的问题上为自己做决定的权利得到的认可有限。为解决这一问题,加纳于 2019 年通过了《世卫组织质量权利倡议》。其目的是在精神卫生保健系统中引入以权利为基础、以人为本的康复方法,在医疗保健环境和社区中保护和促进精神疾病患者、社会心理残疾者、认知残疾者和智力残疾者的权利:方法:在加纳为广泛的利益相关群体提供了电子培训(能力建设),包括医疗保健专业人员、护理人员和有生活经验的人。培训内容包括法律能力、胁迫、社区包容、康复方法、服务环境以及利益相关群体通常持有的负面态度;截至 2021 年 12 月,加纳已有 17000 人完成了培训。我们通过比较受训者在问卷调查前后对 17 个项目的回答来评估电子培训对态度的影响,每个项目都采用 5 分李克特量表(从非常不同意到非常同意)进行测量,得分越高表明对精神疾病患者和社会心理残疾者作为权利持有者的负面态度越强。分析主要针对两组:配对组(417 对基线和随访问卷回答高度匹配)和非配对组(4299 份个人填写的问卷回答):我们评估了世卫组织 "质量权 "电子培训对态度的影响:培训使人们对与人权保持一致的态度发生了非常显著的变化,在基线和后续调查之间,分数变化了约 40%。尤其是在治疗选择、法律能力和胁迫等项目上,态度发生了变化。这种变化不受年龄、性别或背景经验的影响:结论:"质量权 "电子培训项目能有效改变人们(尤其是医疗保健专业人员)对精神疾病患者以及心理、智力或认知障碍患者的态度:这是精神医疗保健在全球范围内更加注重人权的一步。
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A quantitative analysis of human rights-related attitude changes towards people with mental health conditions and psychosocial, intellectual, or cognitive disabilities following completion of the WHO QualityRights e-training in Ghana.

Background: Despite growing recognition of essential human rights, people with mental health conditions and psychosocial, intellectual, or cognitive disabilities' rights are known to be frequently violated in mental healthcare worldwide, with common use of coercive practices and limited recognition of people's right to exercise their legal capacity and make decisions for themselves on treatment and other issues affecting them. To tackle this issue, Ghana adopted the WHO QualityRights Initiative in 2019. This aims to introduce a right-based, person-centred recovery approach within the mental health care system, protecting and promoting the rights of people with mental health conditions, psychosocial, cognitive, and intellectual disabilities in the healthcare context and community.

Methods: E-training (capacity-building) was provided in Ghana across a broad array of stakeholder groups including healthcare professionals, carers, and people with lived experience. The training covered legal capacity, coercion, community inclusion, recovery approach, service environment, and the negative attitudes commonly held by stakeholder groups; it was completed by 17,000 people in Ghana as of December 2021. We assessed the impact of the e-training on attitudes through comparing trainees' pre- and post-questionnaire responses on 17 items, each measured on a 5-point Likert scale (strongly disagree to strongly agree), such that higher scores indicated negative attitudes towards persons with mental health conditions and psychosocial disabilities as rights holders. Analyses were conducted on two main groups: matched pairs (417 pairs of baseline and follow-up questionnaire responses matched to a high degree of certainty), and the unmatched group (4299 individual completed questionnaire responses).

Results: We assessed the impact of the WHO QualityRights e-training on attitudes: training resulted in highly significant attitude changes towards alignment with human rights, with scores changing by approximately 40% between baseline and follow-up. In particular, attitude changes were seen in items representing treatment choice, legal capacity, and coercion. This change was not affected by age, gender, or background experience.

Conclusions: The QualityRights e-training programme is effective in changing people's (especially healthcare professionals') attitudes towards people with mental health conditions and psychosocial, intellectual, or cognitive disabilities: this is a step towards mental healthcare being more with human rights-based worldwide.

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6.90
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2.80%
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52
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13 weeks
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