'I Can't See Myself Seeking Help': The Influence of Clinical Placements on Nursing Students' Stigmatising Beliefs and Intentions to Seek Help for Their Own Mental Health Issues: A Prospective Cohort Study.

Lorna Moxham, Michelle Roberts, Taylor Yousiph, Elissa-Kate Jay, Kelly Lewer, Georgia Robson, Peta Drury, Joanne Cordina, Suzi Villeneuve-Smith, Christopher Patterson
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Abstract

Mental health conditions such as anxiety, depression and psychosis represent a global health challenge. Stigma surrounding mental health continues to hinder help-seeking behaviours for people with mental illness and as this study demonstrates, nursing students as well. However, if student nurses are reluctant to seek help for mental health issues, how can others be expected to do so? This reluctance poses challenges in mental health nursing, impacting both care provision and nursing education. The present study seeks to explore the influence of traditional versus non-traditional mental health clinical placements on second-year nursing students' stigmatising beliefs and intentions to seek help for mental health issues. Employing a prospective cohort design using the TREND checklist, the study sampled second-year nursing students assigned to either traditional hospital-based or non-traditional recovery-focused mental health clinical placements. Using validated scales, stigmatising beliefs and help-seeking intentions were measured before and after the placements. Statistical analyses were conducted to assess changes in these variables over time and across placement settings. A significant impact of placement setting on help-seeking intentions was observed, with students in non-traditional placements showing an increased willingness to seek help. Additionally, non-traditional placements were found to significantly reduce stigmatising beliefs in all measured domains, suggesting that these settings may provide a more conducive environment for fostering positive attitudes towards mental health. Recovery-focused placements appear to offer experiences that can diminish stigma and encourage more positive perceptions and intentions related to mental health support.

我看不到自己会寻求帮助":临床实习对护理专业学生的污名化信念以及为自身心理健康问题寻求帮助的意愿的影响:一项前瞻性队列研究。
焦虑、抑郁和精神病等精神疾病是一项全球性的健康挑战。围绕心理健康的耻辱感继续阻碍着心理疾病患者的求助行为,正如本研究所示,也阻碍着护理专业学生的求助行为。然而,如果护士学生不愿意为心理健康问题寻求帮助,又怎能指望其他人会这样做呢?这种不情愿给心理健康护理工作带来了挑战,对护理服务的提供和护理教育都产生了影响。本研究旨在探讨传统与非传统心理健康临床实习对护理专业二年级学生的污名化信念和心理健康问题求助意愿的影响。本研究采用前瞻性队列设计,使用 TREND 检查表,抽样调查了被分配到传统的以医院为基础或非传统的以康复为重点的心理健康临床实习的二年级护理学生。使用经过验证的量表,对实习前后的鄙视信念和求助意向进行了测量。我们进行了统计分析,以评估这些变量随时间和安置环境的变化。观察发现,实习环境对求助意愿有重大影响,在非传统实习环境中,学生的求助意愿有所提高。此外,研究还发现,非传统性实习能显著减少所有测量领域中的鄙视信念,这表明这些实习环境能为培养学生对心理健康的积极态度提供更有利的环境。以康复为重点的安置似乎提供了可以减少污名化的体验,并鼓励与心理健康支持相关的更积极的观念和意向。
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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