| Literature DB >> 26413429 |
Raymond J Gibbons1, Einar B Thorsteinsson1, Natasha M Loi1.
Abstract
Objectives. The current study investigated mental health literacy in an Australian sample to examine sex differences in the identification of and attitudes towards various aspects of mental illness. Method. An online questionnaire was completed by 373 participants (M = 34.87 years). Participants were randomly assigned either a male or female version of a vignette depicting an individual exhibiting the symptoms of one of three types of mental illness (depression, anxiety, or psychosis) and asked to answer questions relating to aspects of mental health literacy. Results. Males exhibited poorer mental health literacy skills compared to females. Males were less likely to correctly identify the type of mental illness, more likely to rate symptoms as less serious, to perceive the individual as having greater personal control over such symptoms, and less likely to endorse the need for treatment for anxiety or psychosis. Conclusion. Generally, the sample was relatively proficient at correctly identifying mental illness but overall males displayed poorer mental health literacy skills than females.Entities:
Keywords: Mental health literacy; Mental illness; Public belief; Sex; Vignette
Year: 2015 PMID: 26413429 PMCID: PMC4581769 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Between Groups ANOVAs for the effects of illness, sex, and protagonist sex on perceived seriousness, need for treatment, and personal control.
| Perceived seriousness | Need for treatment | Personal control | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Measures |
| Partial |
| Partial |
| Partial |
| Illness type (I) | 69.74 | .28 | 49.81 | .22 | 20.50 | .10 |
| Sex (S) | 6.19 | .02 | 18.29 | .05 | 7.01 | .02 |
| Protagonist sex (PS) | 4.73 | .01 | 1.04 | <.01 | 0.79 | <.01 |
| I × S | 2.01 | .01 | 3.11 | .02 | 0.36 | <.01 |
| I × PS | 0.02 | <.01 | 0.16 | <.01 | 0.30 | <.01 |
| S × PS | 2.22 | .01 | 0.006 | <.01 | 4.70 | .01 |
| I × S × PS | 0.76 | <.01 | 0.44 | <.01 | 1.42 | .01 |
Notes.
p < .05.
p < .01.
p < .001.
Means and standard deviations for condition, sex of participants and protagonist by the perceived seriousness, need for treatment, and personal control.
| Measure | Perceived seriousness | Need for treatment | Personal control |
|---|---|---|---|
| Illness | |||
| Depression | 5.57 (1.04) | 5.13 (1.10) | 3.81 (1.37) |
| Anxiety | 4.87 (1.18) | 4.67 (1.21) | 4.04 (1.48) |
| Psychosis | 6.46 (0.75) | 6.09 (0.90) | 2.86 (1.56) |
| Participant | |||
| Male | 5.46 (1.30) | 4.94 (1.26) | 3.87 (1.49) |
| Female | 5.72 (1.14) | 5.46 (1.19) | 3.43 (1.57) |
| Protagonist | |||
| Male | 5.74 (1.20) | 5.36 (1.21) | 3.56 (1.64) |
| Female | 5.57 (1.19) | 5.26 (1.25) | 3.55 (1.48) |
Notes.
Values within variables in columns that share a subscript are not different by alpha criterion of .05 (Sidak adjusted).
Figure 1Image of need for treatment expressed by male and female participants towards the three types of mental illness.
Figure 2Image of perceived level of personal control over mental illness for each protagonist sex as rated by each participant sex.