OBJECTIVE: Firstly, to assess and, secondly, to compare experts' and lay attitudes towards community psychiatry and the respective social distance towards mentally ill people. METHOD: Comparison of two representative Swiss samples, one comprising of 90 psychiatrists, the other including 786 individuals of the general population. RESULTS: The psychiatrists' attitude was significantly more positive than that of the general population although both samples have a positive attitude to community psychiatry. The statement that mental health facilities devalue a residential area has revealed most agreement. Psychiatrists and the public do not differ in their social distance to mentally ill people. Among both samples, the level of social distance increases the more the situation described implies "social closeness". CONCLUSION: The strategy to use psychiatrists as role models or opinion leaders in anti-stigma campaigns cannot be realised without accompanying actions. Psychiatrists must be aware that their attitudes do not differ from the general public and, thus, they should improve their knowledge about stigma and discrimination towards people with mental illnesses.
OBJECTIVE: Firstly, to assess and, secondly, to compare experts' and lay attitudes towards community psychiatry and the respective social distance towards mentally ill people. METHOD: Comparison of two representative Swiss samples, one comprising of 90 psychiatrists, the other including 786 individuals of the general population. RESULTS: The psychiatrists' attitude was significantly more positive than that of the general population although both samples have a positive attitude to community psychiatry. The statement that mental health facilities devalue a residential area has revealed most agreement. Psychiatrists and the public do not differ in their social distance to mentally ill people. Among both samples, the level of social distance increases the more the situation described implies "social closeness". CONCLUSION: The strategy to use psychiatrists as role models or opinion leaders in anti-stigma campaigns cannot be realised without accompanying actions. Psychiatrists must be aware that their attitudes do not differ from the general public and, thus, they should improve their knowledge about stigma and discrimination towards people with mental illnesses.
Authors: Alina Beldie; Johan A den Boer; Cecilia Brain; Eric Constant; Maria Luisa Figueira; Igor Filipcic; Benoît Gillain; Miro Jakovljevic; Marek Jarema; Daniela Jelenova; Oguz Karamustafalioglu; Blanka Kores Plesnicar; Andrea Kovacsova; Klara Latalova; Josef Marksteiner; Filipa Palha; Jan Pecenak; Jan Prasko; Dan Prelipceanu; Petter Andreas Ringen; Norman Sartorius; Erich Seifritz; Jaromir Svestka; Magdalena Tyszkowska; Johannes Wancata Journal: Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol Date: 2012-04 Impact factor: 4.328
Authors: Wolfgang Gaebel; Harald Zäske; Jürgen Zielasek; Helen-Rose Cleveland; Kathrin Samjeske; Heather Stuart; Julio Arboleda-Florez; Tsuyoshi Akiyama; Anja E Baumann; Oye Gureje; Miguel R Jorge; Marianne Kastrup; Yuriko Suzuki; Allan Tasman; Thiago M Fidalgo; Marek Jarema; Sarah B Johnson; Lola Kola; Dzmytry Krupchanka; Veronica Larach; Lyndy Matthews; Graham Mellsop; David M Ndetei; Tarek A Okasha; Ekaterina Padalko; Joyce A Spurgeoun; Magdalena Tyszkowska; Norman Sartorius Journal: Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci Date: 2014-09-05 Impact factor: 5.270