Differences in Mental Illness Stigma by Disorder and Gender: Population-Based Vignette Randomized Experiment in Rural Uganda.

PLOS mental health Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-21 DOI:10.1371/journal.pmen.0000069
Yang Jae Lee, Ryan Christ, Rita Mbabazi, Jackson Dabagia, Alison Prendergast, Jason Wykoff, Samhitha Dasari, Dylan Safai, Shakira Nakaweesi, Swaib Rashid Aturinde, Michael Galvin, Dickens Akena, Scholastic Ashaba, Peter Waiswa, Robert Rosenheck, Alexander C Tsai
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Abstract

Understanding and eliminating mental illness stigma is crucial for improving population mental health. In many settings, this stigma is gendered, from the perspectives of both the stigmatized and the stigmatizers. We aimed to find the differences in the level of stigma across different mental disorders while considering the gender of the study participants as well as the gender of the people depicted in the vignettes. This was a population-based, experimental vignette study conducted in Buyende District of Eastern Uganda in 2023. We created 8 vignettes describing both men and women with alcohol use disorder, major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and schizophrenia consistent with DSM-5 criteria. Participants from 20 villages in rural Buyende District of Uganda (N=379) were first read a randomly selected vignette and administered a survey eliciting their attitudes (Personal Acceptance Scale [PAS] and Broad Acceptance Scale [BAS]) towards the person depicted in the vignette. We used analysis of variance (ANOVA) with Bonferroni-adjusted, empirical p-values to compare levels of acceptance across disorders and genders. Attitudes towards people with mental illness, as measured by the PAS, varied across different mental disorders (p=0.002). In pairwise mean comparisons, the greater acceptance of anxiety disorder vs. schizophrenia was statistically significant (Mean [SD] PAS: 2.91 [3.15] vs 1.62 [1.95], p=0.008). Secondary analyses examining differences in acceptance across gender combinations within mental disorders showed that PAS varied across gender combinations for depression (p=0.017), suggesting that acceptance is higher for women with depression than men with depression. In this population-based vignette study from rural Uganda, we found that people with schizophrenia were less accepted compared to people with anxiety disorders. We also found that there was greater acceptance of women with depression than men with depression. Anti-stigma initiatives may need to be targeted to specific disorders and genders.

不同疾病和性别在精神疾病耻辱感方面的差异:乌干达农村地区基于人口的小插图随机试验。
了解并消除对精神疾病的成见对于改善人们的心理健康至关重要。在许多情况下,从被鄙视者和鄙视者的角度来看,这种鄙视都是性别化的。我们的目标是,在考虑研究参与者的性别以及小故事中描述的人物的性别的同时,发现不同精神障碍的污名化程度的差异。这是一项以人口为基础的实验性小故事研究,于 2023 年在乌干达东部的布延德区进行。我们根据 DSM-5 标准制作了 8 个小故事,描述了患有酒精使用障碍、重度抑郁障碍、广泛性焦虑障碍和精神分裂症的男性和女性。我们首先向来自乌干达布延德农村地区 20 个村庄的参与者(379 人)朗读了随机选取的小故事,然后对他们进行了一项调查,以了解他们对小故事中所描述的人的态度(个人接受量表 [PAS] 和广泛接受量表 [BAS])。我们使用方差分析(ANOVA)和经 Bonferroni-adjusted 修正的经验 P 值来比较不同疾病和性别的接受程度。根据 PAS 的测量结果,不同精神障碍患者对精神病患者的态度各不相同(P=0.002)。在配对平均值比较中,焦虑症患者对精神分裂症患者的接受度更高,这在统计学上具有显著意义(平均值 [SD] PAS:2.91 [3.15] vs 1.62 [1.95],P=0.008)。对精神障碍中不同性别组合接受度差异的二次分析表明,抑郁症的 PAS 在不同性别组合中存在差异(P=0.017),这表明女性抑郁症患者的接受度高于男性抑郁症患者。在这项基于乌干达农村人口的小故事研究中,我们发现与焦虑症患者相比,精神分裂症患者的接受度较低。我们还发现,女性抑郁症患者比男性抑郁症患者更容易被接受。反污名化倡议可能需要针对特定的疾病和性别。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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