Beyond recognition: beliefs, attitudes, and help-seeking for depression and schizophrenia in Ghana

IF 1.3 Q3 PSYCHIATRY
Peter Adu, Tomas Jurcik, D. Grigoryev
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT Research on the beliefs and attitudes regarding specific mental disorders in Ghana is limited. A vignette study was conducted to examine the relationship between causal attributions, help-seeking, and stigma towards depression and schizophrenia using lay Ghanaians (N = 410). This adapted questionnaire presented two unlabelled vignettes about a hypothetical person with the above disorders for participants to provide their impressions. Next, participants answered questions on beliefs and attitudes regarding this person. The results showed that causal beliefs about mental disorders related to different treatment options, and stigma. Contrary to previous literature, religious belief did not negatively associate with professional help-seeking for the mental disorders. In conclusion, results suggest that integration of “idioms of distress' into mental health assessment and interventions may benefit Ghanaians. Our findings have implications for mental health literacy and anti-stigma campaigns in Ghana and other developing countries in the region.
面面相觑:加纳对抑郁症和精神分裂症的信仰、态度和求助
关于加纳特定精神障碍的信念和态度的研究是有限的。本研究对加纳外行人(N = 410)进行了一项小调查,以调查抑郁症和精神分裂症的因果归因、寻求帮助和耻辱感之间的关系。这个改编的问卷提出了两个未标记的小插曲,关于一个假设的人与上述障碍的参与者提供他们的印象。接下来,参与者回答了关于这个人的信念和态度的问题。结果表明,关于精神障碍的因果信念与不同的治疗方案和耻辱有关。与以往文献相反,宗教信仰与精神障碍的专业求助并无负相关。总之,研究结果表明,将“痛苦习语”纳入心理健康评估和干预措施可能会使加纳人受益。我们的研究结果对加纳和该地区其他发展中国家的心理健康素养和反污名运动具有启示意义。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
63
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