越南孕妇的心理健康耻辱感与寻求健康的行为:一项混合方法现实主义研究。

IF 4.5 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH International Journal for Equity in Health Pub Date : 2024-08-16 DOI:10.1186/s12939-024-02250-z
Le Minh Thi, Ana Manzano, Bui Thi Thu Ha, Le Thi Vui, Nguyen Thai Quynh-Chi, Doan Thi Thuy Duong, Kimberly Lakin, Sumit Kane, Tolib Mirzoev, Do Thi Hanh Trang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在中低收入国家,约有 15%的妇女患有常见的围产期精神障碍。然而,由于医疗质量差、可及性有限、知识有限以及污名化等原因,许多妇女即使被诊断出患有精神疾病,也得不到治疗。本文描述了在越南,与心理健康相关的污名化是如何影响孕妇决定不披露自己的病情和寻求治疗的,所有这些都加剧了孕产妇心理保健的不公平:采用混合方法进行了一项现实主义研究,包括 22 次深入访谈、4 次焦点小组讨论(总参与人数 n = 44)以及由 639 名孕妇填写的自填问卷。采用平行收敛模式进行混合方法分析。数据分析采用现实主义分析逻辑,这是一个旨在完善已确定理论的迭代过程。调查数据使用 SPSS 22 和描述性分析进行分析。定性数据采用背景、机制和结果的组合进行分析,以阐明因果联系并为复杂性提供解释:结果:近一半的孕妇(43.5%)会试图隐瞒自己的心理健康问题,38.3%的孕妇会避免寻求心理健康专业人士的帮助,这凸显了成见在很大程度上影响着孕妇寻求健康和获得医疗服务。四个关键领域凸显了成见在孕产妇心理健康中的作用:恐惧和污名化的语言助长了对精神疾病的隐瞒,使其不被注意;对孕产妇心理健康的无意识、正常化和低文化程度;羞耻感、家庭结构和怀孕期间的性别角色;以及法规、转诊途径和获得心理健康支持服务的相互影响进一步加剧了挑战:结论:解决与心理健康相关的污名化问题可以影响披露信息的决定和寻求健康的行为,进而通过提供及时的关注、广泛的选择和更好的沟通,提高当地医疗系统对有心理健康需求的孕妇的响应能力。在越南,为减少耻辱感和改善孕妇获得心理保健服务的机会而可能采取的干预措施应针对结构和组织层面,并可包括改善围产期心理保健筛查和转诊,从而预防并发症的发生。
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Mental health stigma and health-seeking behaviors amongst pregnant women in Vietnam: a mixed-method realist study.

Background: Approximately 15% of women in low-and middle-income countries experience common perinatal mental disorders. Yet, many women, even if diagnosed with mental health conditions, are untreated due to poor quality care, limited accessibility, limited knowledge, and stigma. This paper describes how mental health-related stigma influences pregnant women's decisions not to disclose their conditions and to seek treatment in Vietnam, all of which exacerbate inequitable access to maternal mental healthcare.

Methods: A mixed-method realist study was conducted, comprising 22 in-depth interviews, four focus group discussions (total participants n = 44), and a self-administered questionnaire completed by 639 pregnant women. A parallel convergent model for mixed methods analysis was employed. Data were analyzed using the realist logic of analysis, an iterative process aimed at refining identified theories. Survey data underwent analysis using SPSS 22 and descriptive analysis. Qualitative data were analyzed using configurations of context, mechanisms, and outcomes to elucidate causal links and provide explanations for complexity.

Results: Nearly half of pregnant women (43.5%) would try to hide their mental health issues and 38.3% avoid having help from a mental health professional, highlighting the substantial extent of stigma affecting health-seeking and accessing care. Four key areas highlight the role of stigma in maternal mental health: fear and stigmatizing language contribute to the concealment of mental illness, rendering it unnoticed; unconsciousness, normalization, and low literacy of maternal mental health; shame, household structure and gender roles during pregnancy; and the interplay of regulations, referral pathways, and access to mental health support services further compounds the challenges.

Conclusion: Addressing mental health-related stigma could influence the decision of disclosure and health-seeking behaviors, which could in turn improve responsiveness of the local health system to the needs of pregnant women with mental health needs, by offering prompt attention, a wide range of choices, and improved communication. Potential interventions to decrease stigma and improve access to mental healthcare for pregnant women in Vietnam should target structural and organizational levels and may include improvements in screening and referrals for perinatal mental care screening, thus preventing complications.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
4.20%
发文量
162
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal for Equity in Health is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal presenting evidence relevant to the search for, and attainment of, equity in health across and within countries. International Journal for Equity in Health aims to improve the understanding of issues that influence the health of populations. This includes the discussion of political, policy-related, economic, social and health services-related influences, particularly with regard to systematic differences in distributions of one or more aspects of health in population groups defined demographically, geographically, or socially.
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