Abstract

BackgroundIn France, negative views on schizophrenia are pervasive, even among health professionals. Prior research suggests that the level of prejudice is lower when the illness is described with the example of a specific individual. This finding highlights the importance of designing local, targeted destigmatization campaigns. The present study aims to evaluate the benefits of a short intervention offering contact with psychiatric services users on reducing the stigma about mentally ill people, among a sample of Health Administrators and Students.MethodsData were collected before (Time 0) and after (Time 1) a short training intervention program proposed to a sample of 121 Health Services Administrators and Students. This four-day workshop explained the multiple causes of mental illness, the clinical implications of psychosis and various mental disorders, the subjective experience of mental illness and the legal evolutions of users’ rights. The intervention was strongly based on live testimonies from users. Using a French version of the Attitudes to Mental Illness scale, we compared attitudes before and after the training intervention among 58 trainees having answered our questionnaire at Time 0 and Time 1.ResultsAfter the training, a significantly lower endorsement of stigmatizing statements compared to baseline was found in one third (9 out of 27) of the items. These results plead for further research about the potential benefits of initiatives like this short intervention program on significantly reducing stigmatizing attitudes towards mentally ill people among Health Administrators and Students.ConclusionsThe present study highlights the importance of further studying the effect of targeted interventions that offer first hand contact with persons with mental illness.

Highlights

  • In France, negative views on schizophrenia are pervasive, even among health professionals

  • Attitudes towards mental illness can be modified over time by shifts in social perceptions or through media campaigns focused on mental health literacy about a disorder [5,6,7,8]

  • The present paper reports on a short training intervention aimed at exploring the modifications of attitudes towards people suffering from severe mental illness

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Summary

Introduction

In France, negative views on schizophrenia are pervasive, even among health professionals. Prior research suggests that the level of prejudice is lower when the illness is described with the example of a specific individual. This finding highlights the importance of designing local, targeted destigmatization campaigns. Prejudice and discrimination towards people suffering from mental illness are common and socially damaging [1, 2]. This stigma contributes to negative outcomes, self-stigmatization and low self-esteem among persons with mental illness [3, 4].

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