通过简短视频干预减少对精神疾病的自我污名化的随机对照试验。

IF 4.5 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Doron Amsalem, Samantha E Jankowski, Philip Yanos, Lawrence H Yang, John C Markowitz, R Tyler Rogers, T Scott Stroup, Lisa B Dixon, Leah G Pope
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:自我污名化是一种个人将自己对精神疾病的负面刻板印象内化的现象,与康复的负面结果有关。这项随机对照研究评估了基于社会接触的简短视频干预对减少自我鄙视的效果,干预对象为年龄在 18-35 岁之间、患有持续性精神疾病的大样本人群。我们假设简短的视频会减少自我污名:2023 年 1 月和 2 月,我们招募了 1,214 名参与者,并将他们分配到一个以简短视频为基础的干预项目或一个非干预对照项目中,前者描述了一名患有精神疾病的年轻人分享他的个人故事。在这段 2 分钟的视频中,年轻的精神病患者根据焦点小组的意见,讲述了自己与精神疾病症状斗争的经历,同时也描述了自己有意义、有价值的生活。在干预前后和 30 天的随访中进行了自我污名评估(刻板印象认可、疏远、污名抵制、感知贬值歧视、保密和康复评估量表):2 ✕ 3 组-时间方差分析显示,相对于对照组,干预组在 6 个自我污名领域中的 5 个领域的平均自我污名得分都有所下降:刻板印象认可(P = .006)、疏远(P P = .004)、隐秘(P P d 基线到干预后变化的效应大小从 0.22 到 0.46 不等。基线评估和 30 天随访评估没有明显差异:结论:基于社会接触的 2 分钟视频干预能有效地减少患有持续性精神疾病的年轻人的自我耻辱感,但效果并不持久。这是首次研究视频干预对自我污名的影响。未来的自我鄙视治疗干预试验应探讨将现有干预措施与简短视频相结合是否会增强干预效果:NCT05878470.
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Randomized Controlled Trial of a Brief Video Intervention to Reduce Self-Stigma of Mental Illness.

Objective: Self-stigma, a phenomenon wherein individuals internalize self-directed negative stereotypes about mental illness, is associated with negative outcomes related to recovery. This randomized controlled study assessed the efficacy of a brief social contact-based video intervention in reducing self-stigma in a large sample of individuals ages 18-35 endorsing an ongoing mental health condition. We hypothesized that the brief video would reduce self-stigma.

Methods: In January and February 2023, we recruited and assigned 1,214 participants to a brief video-based intervention depicting a young individual living with mental illness sharing his personal story or to a non-intervention control. In the 2-minute video, informed by focus groups, a young individual described struggles with mental illness symptoms; this was balanced with descriptions of living a meaningful and productive life. Self-stigma assessments (Stereotype Endorsement, Alienation, Stigma Resistance, Perceived Devaluation Discrimination, Secrecy, and Recovery Assessment Scale) were conducted pre- and post-intervention and at 30-day follow-up.

Results: A 2 ✕ 3 group-by-time analysis of variance showed that mean self-stigma scores decreased in the intervention arm relative to control across 5 of 6 self-stigma domains: Stereotype Endorsement (P = .006), Alienation (P < .001), Stigma Resistance (P = .004), Secrecy (P < .001), and Recovery Assessment Scale (P < .001). Cohen d effect sizes ranged from 0.22 to 0.46 for baseline to post-intervention changes. Baseline and 30-day follow-up assessments did not significantly differ.

Conclusions: A 2-minute social contact-based video intervention effectively yielded an immediate but not a lasting decrease in self-stigma among young individuals with ongoing mental health conditions. This is the first study to examine the effect of a video intervention on self-stigma. Future trials of self-stigma treatment interventions should explore whether combining existing interventions with brief videos enhances intervention effects.

Trial Registration: NCT05878470.

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来源期刊
Journal of Clinical Psychiatry
Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
1.90%
发文量
0
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: For over 75 years, The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry has been a leading source of peer-reviewed articles offering the latest information on mental health topics to psychiatrists and other medical professionals.The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry is the leading psychiatric resource for clinical information and covers disorders including depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, anxiety, addiction, posttraumatic stress disorder, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder while exploring the newest advances in diagnosis and treatment.
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