| Literature DB >> 32674520 |
Eunmi Lee1, Yoo Mi Jeong2, Su Jeong Yi2.
Abstract
This study aimed to examine the mediating effects of self-stigma and depression on the public stigma and nurses' attitudes toward psychiatric help. A cross-sectional study with 184 nurses at one general hospital in South Korea was conducted employing a self-administered survey, using the Attitudes toward Seeking Psychological Help Scale, the Beck Depression Inventory-II Scale, and the modified Depression Stigma Scale. A multiple-mediation analysis procedure was applied to analyze the data. Each indirect effect of self-stigma (B = -0.0974, bootLLCI, bootULCI: -0.1742, -0.0436) and depression (B = -0.0471, bootLLCI, bootULCI: -0.1014, -0.0060) is statistically significant in the relationship between public stigma and attitudes toward psychiatric help. The individualized intervention for enhancing positive attitude or motivation for seeking help at the personal level of the nurse and depression tests-including regular physical health check-ups-is necessary.Entities:
Keywords: depression; nurse; seeking help; stigma
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32674520 PMCID: PMC7400599 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17145073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Characteristics of participants (N =184).
| Characteristics | Categories | Mean (±SD) or n (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 26.56 (±3.59) | |
| Total career year | 4.05 (±3.94) | |
| Gender | Male | 10 (5%) |
| Female | 174 (95%) | |
| Marital status | Single | 161 (88%) |
| Married | 23 (13%) | |
| Education | College | 20 (12%) |
| University | 164 (88%) | |
| Department | ||
| Internal unit | 44( 24%) | |
| Surgical unit | 33 (18%) | |
| emergency room | 20 (11%) | |
| Intensive care unit | 47 (26%) | |
| operating room | 21 (11%) | |
| Nursing Care Integration | 6 (3%) | |
| Other (Gynecology, Psychiatry) | 13 (7%) |
Correlations among variables of nurses (N= 184).
| Help-Seeking | Depression | Self-Stigma | Public Stigma | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | −0.244 ** | |||
| Self-stigma | −0.238 ** | −0.069 | ||
| Public stigma | −0.049 | −0.121 | −0.404 *** | −1 |
| Mean | −26.30 | −12.05 | −14.32 | −26.53 |
| SD | −5.345 | −8.312 | −3.533 | −6.295 |
Note: ** p < 0.05, *** p < 0.001. SD, Standard deviation.
A Serial Mediation Analysis of Personal Stigma and Depression on Public Stigma to Attitude Toward Psychiatric Help.
| b | se | boot se | bootLLCI | bootULCI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| direct | 0.0759 | 0.0679 | −0.0581 | 0.2100 | |
| indirect | |||||
| total | −0.1271 | −0.0407 | −0.2187 | −0.0578 | |
| x → m1 → y | −0.0974 | −0.0336 | −0.01742 | −0.0436 | |
| x → m2 → y | −0.0471 | −0.0251 | −0.01014 | −0.0060 | |
| x → m1 → m2 → y | −0.0174 | −0.0110 | −0.0002 | −0.0428 |
Note: Number of bootstrap samples for bias corrected bootstrap confidence intervals: 10,000. Level of confidence for all confidence intervals: 95%. x, public stigma; m1, self-stigma; m2, depression; y, attitude toward psychiatric help. LL, lower level; UL, upper level.
Figure 1A serial mediation analysis of personal stigma and depression on public stigma to attitudes toward psychiatric help.