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Social distance and stigma towards persons with serious mental illness among medical students in five European Central Asia countries

Authors :
Kerim Munir
Ozgur Oner
Coskun Kerala
Ikram Rustamov
Hamit Boztas
Konrad Juszkiewicz
Anna Wloszczak-Szubzda
Zhanna Kalmatayeva
Aygun Iskandarova
Sevda Zeynalli
Dragan Cibrev
Lyazzat Kosherbayeva
Nermin Miriyeva
Mirosław Jerzy Jarosz
Kural Kurakbayev
Ewelina Soroka
Sanja Mancevska
Nermin Novruzova
Melda Emin
Marcin Olajossy
Stojan Bajraktarov
Marija Raleva
Ashok Roy
Muhammad Waqar Azeem
Marco Bertelli
Luis Salvador-Carulla
Afzal Javed
Source :
Psychiatry research. 309
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The study investigated behavioral measures of social distance (i.e., desired proximity between self and others in social contexts) as an index of stigma against those with mental illness among medical students in the Republic of North Macedonia, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Poland, using the Reported and Intended Behavior Scale (RIBS), a standardized, self-administered behavioral measure based on the Star Social Distance Scale. The students' responses to standardized clinical vignettes on schizophrenia, and depression with suicidal ideation, were also assessed. A total of 257 North Macedonian (females, 31.5%; 1-4 grades, 189; 5-6 grades, 68); 268 Turkish (females, 43.3%; 1-4 grades, 90; 5-6 grades, 178); 450 Kazakh (females, 28.4%, 71.6%; 1-4 grades, 312; 5-6 grades, 138); 512 Azerbaijani (females, 24%; 1-4 grades, 468; 5-6 grades, 44; females, 24%), and 317 Polish (females, 59.0%; 1-4 grades, 208; 5-6 grades, 109) students were surveyed. The responses on the RIBS social distance behavior measures did not improve with advancing medical school grade, but students across all sites viewed schizophrenia and depression as real medical illnesses. The results support the development of enhanced range of integrated training opportunities for medical student to socially interact with persons with mental illness sharing their experiences with them.

Details

ISSN :
18727123
Volume :
309
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychiatry research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a98b7375b787d6a1dd06e9cacbf03eae