| Literature DB >> 25939823 |
Elina Stefanovics1,2, Hongbo He3, Angela Ofori-Atta4, Maria Tavares Cavalcanti5, Helio Rocha Neto5, Victor Makanjuola6, Adesuwa Ighodaro7, Meaghan Leddy8, Robert Rosenheck8,7.
Abstract
This quantitative study sought to compare beliefs about the manifestation, causes and treatment of mental illness and attitudes toward people with mental illness among health professionals from five countries: the United States, Brazil, Ghana, Nigeria, and China. A total of 902 health professionals from the five countries were surveyed using a questionnaire addressing attitudes towards people with mental illness and beliefs about the causes of mental illness. Chi-square and analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) were used to compare age and gender of the samples. Confirmatory factor analysis was employed to confirm the structure and fit of the hypothesized model based on data from a previous study that identified four factors: socializing with people with mental illness (socializing), belief that people with mental illness should have normal roles in society (normalizing), non-belief in supernatural causes (witchcraft or curses), and belief in bio-psycho-social causes of mental illness (bio-psycho-social). Analysis of Covariance was used to compare four factor scores across countries adjusting for differences in age and gender. Scores on all four factors were highest among U.S. professionals. The Chinese sample showed lowest score on socializing and normalizing while the Nigerian and Ghanaian samples were lowest on non-belief in supernatural causes of mental illness. Responses from Brazil fell between those of the U.S. and the other countries. Although based on convenience samples of health professional robust differences in attitudes among health professionals between these five countries appear to reflect underlying socio-cultural differences affecting attitudes of professionals with the greater evidence of stigmatized attitudes in developing countries.Entities:
Keywords: Attitudes to mental illness; Cross-cultural research; International comparison; Mental health providers; Stigma
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 25939823 DOI: 10.1007/s11126-015-9363-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatr Q ISSN: 0033-2720