| Literature DB >> 28533684 |
Monica Zolezzi1,2, Nawal Bensmail2, Farah Zahrah2, Salma Mawfek Khaled3, Tayseer El-Gaili4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stigma in relation to mental illness is one of the main factors inhibiting people from seeking help. Studies have been undertaken looking into the knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs (KAB) about mental illness among residents in Qatar; however, none have looked specifically at students in higher education. The aim of this study was to understand the KAB toward mental illness among students at a Qatari university and determine if there are any differences based on gender, nationality, and college type.Entities:
Keywords: attitude and behavior; knowledge; mental illness; stigmatization; university students
Year: 2017 PMID: 28533684 PMCID: PMC5431692 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S132075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Demographic characteristics of the studied sample (N=282)
| Students’ characteristics | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Male | 114 (40.7) |
| Female | 116 (59.3) |
| Qatari | 100 (35.7) |
| Non-Qatari | 180 (64.3) |
| <18 | 17 (6.0) |
| 18–24 | 241 (85.8) |
| 25–30 | 20 (7.1) |
| >30 | 3 (1.1) |
| Married | 21 (7.5) |
| Single | 259 (92.5) |
| Alone | 7 (2.5) |
| With family | 271 (96.8) |
| With friends | 2 (0.7) |
| First | 69 (24.6) |
| Second | 76 (27.0) |
| Third | 64 (22.8) |
| Fourth | 37 (13.2) |
| Fifth | 14 (5.0) |
| Post-graduate | 21 (7.5) |
| Science based | 177 (62.7) |
| Arts and sciences | 37 (13.1) |
| Pharmacy | 21 (7.4) |
| Engineering | 79 (28.0) |
| Medicine | 40 (14.2) |
| Non-science based | 105 (37.2) |
| Business | 57 (20.2) |
| Law | 15 (5.3) |
| Education | 25 (8.9) |
| Islamic studies | 8 (2.8) |
| Yes | 45 (18.9) |
| No | 169 (71.0) |
| I don’t know | 24 (10.1) |
Notes: N= total number of students completing the survey, n= number of valid responses, %= percent of valid responses.
Stigmatizing beliefs about mental illness among different student cohorts
| Beliefs about mental illness | Male (n=114)
| Female (n=116)
| Qataris (n=100)
| Non-Qataris (n=180)
| Science based (n=177)
| Non-sciencebased (n=105)
| Total sample (N=282)
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % stigmatizing response | % stigmatizing response | % stigmatizing response | % stigmatizing response | % stigmatizing response | % stigmatizing response | % stigmatizing response | ||||
| Mental illness is like any other illness | 64.2 (70/109) | 52.4 (77/147) | 0.01 | 58.3 (53/91) | 57.0 (94/165) | 0.20 | 55.9 (90/161) | 60.4 (58/96) | 0.02 | 57.4 (147/256) |
| Mental illness is due to possession by evil spirits | 28.5 (31/109) | 33.0 (50/148) | 0.46 | 39.6 (36/91) | 26.5% (44/166) | 0.02 | 28.4 (46/162) | 36.5 (35/96) | 0.39 | 31.5 (81/257) |
| Chemical imbalances in the brain can result in mental illness | 34.0 (37/109) | 15.6 (23/147) | <0.01 | 24.2 (22/91) | 22.4 (37/165) | 0.20 | 16.7 (27/162) | 34.7 (33/95) | <0.01 | 23.4 (60/256) |
| Mental illness is a punishment from God | 58.7 (64/109) | 43.8 (64/146) | 0.06 | 60.0 (54/90) | 44.8 (74/165) | 0.06 | 46.2 (74/160) | 57.3 (55/96) | <0.01 | 50.2 (128/255) |
| Stress or traumatic events can result in mental illness | 4.6 (5/109) | 10.9 (16/147) | 0.11 | 17.8 (16/90) | 3.6 (6/166) | <0.01 | 5.6 (9/161) | 13.5 (13/96) | 0.01 | 8.2 (21/256) |
| Genetic inheritance can be the cause of mental illness | 36.7 (40/109) | 34.0 (50/147) | 0.33 | 38.9 (35/90) | 33.2 (55/166) | 0.65 | 31.6 (51/161) | 41.7 (40/96) | 0.11 | 35.2 (90/256) |
| Mental illness can be treated | 28.4 (29/102) | 25.2 (34/135) | 0.03 | 26.5 (22/83) | 26.8 (41/153) | 0.73 | 25.6 (38/148) | 28.1 (25/89) | 0.89 | 23.1 (63/237) |
| Medications used to treat mental illness can cause addiction | 88.1 (96/109) | 81.6 (120/147) | 0.03 | 88.9 (80/90) | 82.0 (136/166) | 0.10 | 84.5 (136/161) | 82.6 (81/96) | 0.23 | 84.0 (216/256) |
Notes: n= number of observations; total = total of valid responses; χ2= chi-square test;
P<0.05,
P<0.01,
P<0.001.
Stigmatizing responses, those associated with poor awareness about mental illness, the aggregate of either
“no” and “do not know” or
“yes” and “do not know” responses, depending on the statement about beliefs associated with mental illness.
Stigmatizing attitudes about mental illness among different student cohorts
| Attitudes toward mental illness | Male (n=114)
| Female (n=116
) | Qataris (n=100)
| Non-Qataris (n=180)
| Science based (n=177)
| Non-science based (n=105)
| Total sample (N=282)
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % stigmatizing response | % stigmatizing response | % stigmatizing response | % stigmatizing response | % stigmatizing response | % stigmatizing response | % stigmatizing response | ||||
| People with mental illness can study at university | 41.5 (44/106) | 52.1 (73/140) | 0.10 | 51.1 (44/86) | 45.9 (73/159) | 0.42 | 43.1 (66/153) | 54.8 (51/93) | 0.16 | 47.6 (117/246) |
| People with mental illness can work in regular jobs | 59.4 (63/106) | 60.7 (85/140) | 0.46 | 64.4 (56/87) | 58.5 (93/159) | 0.14 | 57.8 (89/154) | 64.5 (60/93) | 0.10 | 60.2 (148/246) |
| People with mental illness can get married | 51.9 (55/106) | 52.1 (73/140) | 0.87 | 52.4 (45/86) | 51.6 (82/159) | 0.07 | 47.7 (73/153) | 59.1 (55/93) | 0.14 | 52.0 (128/246) |
| People with mental illness can have children | 50.9 (54/106) | 55.0 (77/140) | 0.79 | 54.6 (47/86) | 52.2 (83/159) | 0.04 | 50.9 (78/153) | 57.0 (53/93) | 0.20 | 53.3 (131/246) |
| People with mental illness are dangerous | 73.6 (77/106) | 60.4 (84/139) | 0.14 | 70.1 (61/87) | 62.7 (99/158) | 0.34 | 64.7 (99/153) | 66.7 (62/93) | 0.03 | 65.7 (161/245) |
| Willing to maintain friendship with someone with mental illness | 46.2 (49/106) | 41.4 (59/140) | 0.75 | 47.8 (42/88) | 40.5 (64/158) | 0.52 | 37.9 (58/153) | 52.1 (49/94) | 0.01 | 43.5 (107/246) |
| Willing to study/work with someone with a mental illness | 58.5 (62/106) | 46.4 (65/140) | 0.12 | 47.1 (41/87) | 54.7 (87/159) | 0.52 | 50.4 (77/153) | 54.3 (51/94) | 0.77 | 51.6 (127/246) |
| Willing to marry someone with mental illness | 93.4 (99/106) | 85.5 (118/138) | 0.05 | 87.4 (76/87) | 89.8 (141/157) | 0.64 | 88.8 (135/152) | 89.3 (83/93) | 0.84 | 88.9 (217/244) |
| Ashamed if someone in the family or themselves have a mental illness | 36.8 (39/106) | 31.4 (44/140) | 0.67 | 31.8 (28/88) | 34.6 (55/159) | 0.10 | 33.1 (51/154) | 34.4 (32/93) | 0.45 | 33.7 (83/246) |
Notes: n= number of observations; total = total of valid responses; χ2= chi-square test;
P<0.05.
Stigmatizing responses, those associated with poor awareness about mental illness, the aggregate of either
“no” and “do not know” or
“yes” and “do not know” responses, depending on the statement about beliefs associated with mental illness.
Help-seeking and treatment preferences
| Sources of help | Male (n=114)
| Female (n=116)
| Qataris (n=100)
| Non-Qataris (n=180)
| Science based (n=177)
| Non-science based (n=105)
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % yes/maybe responses (n/total) | % yes/maybe responses (n/total) | % yes/maybe responses (n/total) | % yes/maybe responses (n/total) | % yes/maybe responses (n/total) | % yes/maybe responses (n/total) | ||||
| Family member | 84.3 (86/102) | 84.6 (110/130) | 0.53 | 83.8 (67/80) | 84.7 (128/151) | 0.38 | 84.1 (122/145) | 85.0 (74/87) | 0.78 |
| Friend | 85.3 (87/102) | 70.8 (92/130) | <0.01 | 72.8 (59/81) | 79.3 (119/150) | 0.46 | 76.6 (111/145) | 78.2 (68/87) | 0.91 |
| Psychiatric doctor | 80.4 (82/102) | 82.7 (105/127) | 0.88 | 77.6 (62/80) | 83.8 (124/148) | 0.39 | 86.6 (123/142) | 73.5 (64/87) | <0.01 |
| Counselor | 66.3 (67/101) | 66.1 (84/127) | 0.89 | 69.6 (55/79) | 64.2 (95/148) | 0.67 | 68.4 (97/142) | 62.8 (54/86) | 0.48 |
| Spiritual healer | 63.7 (65/102) | 59.8 (76/127) | 0.31 | 60.7 (48/79) | 62.4 (93/149) | 0.17 | 59.5 (85/143) | 65.2 (56/86) | <0.01 |
| Pharmacist | 42.6 (43/101) | 46.7 (57/122) | 0.82 | 45.5 (35/77) | 44.9 (65/145) | 0.35 | 45.7 (63/138) | 43.5 (37/85) | 0.95 |
| General physician | 45.6 (46/101) | 49.2 (62/126) | 0.30 | 48.7 (38/78) | 47.3 (70/148) | 0.92 | 47.6 (67/141) | 47.7 (41/86) | 0.64 |
| Nurse | 34.6 (35/101) | 39.5 (49/124) | 0.37 | 41.6 (32/77) | 35.4 (52/147) | 0.66 | 34.3 (48/140) | 42.3 (36/85) | 0.35 |
| Internet | 62.4 (63/101) | 68.6 (85/124) | 0.49 | 64.5 (51/79) | 66.9 (97/145) | 0.80 | 68.6 (96/140) | 61.2 (52/85) | 0.41 |
| Medication | 62.0 (62/100) | 72.7 (96/132) | 0.04 | 67.1 (55/82) | 68.5 (102/149) | 0.86 | 71.2 (104/146) | 62.8 (54/86) | 0.41 |
| Natural product | 50.0 (50/100) | 50.4 (64/127) | 0.94 | 54.3 (44/81) | 47.6 (69/145) | 0.14 | 47.1 (66/140) | 55.2 (48/87) | 0.44 |
| Support group | 65.0 (65/100) | 56.9 (74/130) | 0.43 | 57.3 (47/82) | 61.9 (91/147) | 0.35 | 62.9 (90/143) | 56.3 (49/87) | 0.41 |
| Individual counseling | 72.0 (72/100) | 65.9 (85/129) | 0.10 | 68.3 (56/82) | 68.5 (100/146) | 0.89 | 73.4 (105/143) | 60.5 (52/86) | 0.08 |
| Spiritual healing | 54.0 (54/100) | 48.0 (60/125) | 0.30 | 45.0 (36/80) | 54.2 (78/144) | 0.09 | 60.0 (84/140) | 35.3 (30/85) | <0.01 |
| Family or friend’s support | 83.0 (83/100) | 84.1 (111/132) | 0.94 | 85.4 (70/82) | 82.6 (123/149) | 0.78 | 84.2 (123/146) | 82.6 (71/86) | 0.49 |
| Marriage | 27.3 (27/99) | 15.2 (19/125) | 0.04 | 17.3 (14/81) | 22.5 (32/142) | 0.64 | 21.0 (29/138) | 19.8 (17/86) | 0.82 |
| Cope by self | 36.0 (36/100) | 33.3 (42/126) | 0.66 | 38.8 (31/80) | 32.4 (47/145) | 0.57 | 37.1 (52/140) | 30.2 (26/86) | 0.51 |
Notes: n= number of observations; total = total of valid responses;
P<0.05,
P<0.01,
P<0.001.
Participants were able to select more than one source of help and treatment preferences.
Part 2: Beliefs associated with mental illness (select only ONE answer, “Yes”, “No”, or “I don’t know”)
| Questions | Yes | No | I don’t know |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Do you think that mental illnesses are like any other illness? | |||
| 2. Do you think mental illness is due to possession by evil spirits? | |||
| 3. Do you think chemical imbalances in the brain can cause mental illness? | |||
| 4. Do you think mental illness can be punishment from God? | |||
| 5. Do you think stress in daily life, traumatic event, or shock can cause mental illness or psychological problems? | |||
| 6. Do you think genetic inheritance may be the cause of mental illness? | |||
| 7. Do you think medications used to treat mental illness cause addiction? | |||
| 8. Do you think mental illness can be treated (Select only ONE answer: “Yes”, “No”, or “I don’t know”) |
Part 3: Attitudes associated with mental illness (select only ONE answer, “Yes”, “No”, or “I don’t know”)
| Question: | Yes | No | I don’t know |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Do you think people with mental illness can live normal lives like: | |||
| a. Study at University | |||
| b. Work in regular jobs | |||
| c. Get married | |||
| d. Have children | |||
| 2. Do you think people with mental illness are dangerous? | |||
| 3. Would you be willing to: | |||
| a. Maintain a friendship with someone with mental illness | |||
| b. Study or work with someone with mental illness | |||
| c. Marry someone with mental illness | |||
| 4. Are you ashamed to mention that someone in your family or yourself have a mental illness and/or experienced psychological problems? |
Part 4: Help-seeking and treatment preferences
| Questions | Yes | No | I don’t know |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. During the course of your studies, have you ever had psychological problems or been told you have a mental illness? (Select only ONE answer: “Yes”, “No”, or “I don’t know”) | |||
| 2. Are you aware of the services provided by the Student Counseling Center at QU to help students with psychological problems? (Select only ONE answer: “Yes”, “No”, or “I don’t know”) | |||
| 3. Do you think pharmacists can be trusted to educate individuals with psychological problems on how to use their medications? (Select only ONE answer: “Yes”, “No”, or “I don’t know”) | |||
| 4. Do you think that QU Pharmacy students could have a role in helping fellow QU students with psychological problems by providing medication counseling services in collaboration with the QU Student Counseling Center? (Select only ONE answer: “Yes”, “No”, or “I don’t know”) | |||
| 5. If you are faced with a psychological problem who would you approach for help: (Select only ONE answer, “Yes”, “No”, or “Maybe”) | |||
| a. Family members? | |||
| b. Friends? | |||
| c. Psychiatrist Doctor? | |||
| d. Counselor? | |||
| e. Spiritual/religious healer? | |||
| f. Pharmacist? | |||
| g. General Physician? | |||
| h. Nurse? | |||
| i. Internet? | |||
| 6. If you had a mental illness which treatment(s) would you prefer: (Select only ONE answer, “Yes” or “No”) | |||
| a. Medication | |||
| b. Support groups/group counseling | |||
| c. Individual counseling | |||
| d. Spiritual healing | |||
| e. Family or friends support | |||
| f. Natural product, like herbs | |||
| g. Marriage | |||
| h. I can get over the problem on my own |