Lorna Moxham, Amy Tapsell, Dana Perlman, Abbas Al Mutair, Ahmad Yahya AL-Sagarat, Faris A. Alsaraireh, Min-Huey Chung, Tessy Treesa Jose, Shu-Yu Kuo, Megan F. Liu, Asha K. Nayak, Abbas Shamsan, Christopher Sudhakar, Hsiu-Ting Tsai, Binil Velayudhan, Chyn-Yng Yang, Michelle M. Roberts, Pi-Ming Yeh, Christopher Patterson
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Accessible Summary
What is known on the subject
Health professionals, including nurses, are shown to have stigmatizing attitudes towards mental illness.
For nursing students who are in their formative years of professional development, mental illness stigma can severely impact the care they provide.
Little research has investigated multi-national comparisons of nursing students' attitudes towards mental illness.
What this paper adds to existing knowledge
This study shows that between countries, there were substantial differences amongst nursing students in stigmatizing attitudes towards mental illness.
Cultural perspectives may explain some of these differences.
What are the implications for practice
Regardless of location, stigmatizing attitudes are present at varying levels. Each nation can take steps to reduce these by acknowledging the presence of stigmatizing attitudes amongst nurses, educating nurses regarding the negative impacts of stigma on patient outcomes, and decrease stigmatizing attitudes by facilitating opportunities for nurses (particularly student nurses) to have direct contact with people with lived experiences of mental illness.
Introduction
Stigmatizing attitudes perpetuated by nursing professionals are a pervasive problem for people experiencing mental health issues. This global issue has detrimental consequences; inhibiting one's life chances and help-seeking behaviours. To date, few studies have compared nursing students' attitudes towards mental illness from a multi-national perspective.
Aim
To compare undergraduate nursing students' attitudes towards mental illness across six countries: Australia, India, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan and USA.
Method
In a cross-sectional design, data were collected from undergraduate nursing students (N = 426) using the Social Distance Scale. A one-way analysis of variance was used to compare differences between countries.
Results
Nursing students' attitudes to mental illness differed between countries. Social Distance Scores were highest amongst nursing students from Jordan and Saudi Arabia. Students from Taiwan and India possessed moderate stigma scores. Social Distance Scores from the USA and Australia were lowest.
Discussion
Clear differences in stigmatizing attitudes emerged between countries; these are discussed in relation to possible cultural influences.
Implications for Practice
It is suggested that educating nurses, combined with direct contact with people with lived experiences of mental illness, can reduce stigmatizing attitudes regardless of country, location or educational institution.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing is an international journal which publishes research and scholarly papers that advance the development of policy, practice, research and education in all aspects of mental health nursing. We publish rigorously conducted research, literature reviews, essays and debates, and consumer practitioner narratives; all of which add new knowledge and advance practice globally.
All papers must have clear implications for mental health nursing either solely or part of multidisciplinary practice. Papers are welcomed which draw on single or multiple research and academic disciplines. We give space to practitioner and consumer perspectives and ensure research published in the journal can be understood by a wide audience. We encourage critical debate and exchange of ideas and therefore welcome letters to the editor and essays and debates in mental health.