Mental health stigma and primary health care decisions

Abstract People with serious mental illness have higher rates of mortality and morbidity due to physical illness. In part, this occurs because primary care and other health providers sometimes make decisions contrary to typical care standards. This might occur because providers endorse mental illnes...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry research 2014-08, Vol.218 (1), p.35-38
Hauptverfasser: Corrigan, Patrick W, Mittal, Dinesh, Reaves, Christina M, Haynes, Tiffany F, Han, Xiaotong, Morris, Scott, Sullivan, Greer
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container_end_page 38
container_issue 1
container_start_page 35
container_title Psychiatry research
container_volume 218
creator Corrigan, Patrick W
Mittal, Dinesh
Reaves, Christina M
Haynes, Tiffany F
Han, Xiaotong
Morris, Scott
Sullivan, Greer
description Abstract People with serious mental illness have higher rates of mortality and morbidity due to physical illness. In part, this occurs because primary care and other health providers sometimes make decisions contrary to typical care standards. This might occur because providers endorse mental illness stigma, which seems inversely related to prior personal experience with mental illness and mental health care. In this study, 166 health care providers (42.2% primary care, 57.8% mental health practice) from the Veteran׳s Affairs (VA) medical system completed measures of stigma characteristics, expected adherence, and subsequent health decisions (referral to a specialist and refill pain prescription) about a male patient with schizophrenia who was seeking help for low back pain due to arthritis. Research participants reported comfort with previous mental health interventions. Path analyses showed participants who endorsed stigmatizing characteristics of the patient were more likely to believe he would not adhere to treatment and hence, less likely to refer to a specialist or refill his prescription. Endorsement of stigmatizing characteristics was inversely related to comfort with one׳s previous mental health care. Implications of these findings will inform a program meant to enhance VA provider attitudes about people with mental illness, as well as their health decisions.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.psychres.2014.04.028
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Attitude of Health Personnel
Biological and medical sciences
Decision Making
General aspects
Health decisions
Health Personnel
Humans
Medical sciences
Mental Disorders
Mental Health
Primary care
Primary Health Care
Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Referral and Consultation
Schizophrenia
Serious mental illness
Social Stigma
Stigma
title Mental health stigma and primary health care decisions
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