Dehumanization of Hospitalized Patients and Self-Dehumanization by Health Professionals and the General Population in Greece

Introduction Dehumanization is defined as the denial to people of their humanness. It is distinguished into animalistic and mechanistic dehumanization. The aim of this study is to examine whether professionals in a public hospital dehumanize the patient and self-dehumanize. Methods We used the Dehum...

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Veröffentlicht in:Curēus (Palo Alto, CA) CA), 2021-12, Vol.13 (12), p.e20182-e20182
Hauptverfasser: Lekka, Dimitra, Richardson, Clive, Madoglou, Anna, Orlandou, Konstantina, Karamanoli, Vassia I, Roubi, Aikaterini, Pezirkianidis, Christos, Arachoviti, Vasileia, Tsaraklis, Athanasios, Stalikas, Anastasios
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction Dehumanization is defined as the denial to people of their humanness. It is distinguished into animalistic and mechanistic dehumanization. The aim of this study is to examine whether professionals in a public hospital dehumanize the patient and self-dehumanize. Methods We used the Dehumanization Questionnaire, the Mechanistic Self-Dehumanization Scale, the Human Nature and Human Uniqueness Characteristics Questionnaire, the General Causality Orientation Scale and the Adult Attachment Questionnaire. The sample consisted of 135 mental health professionals (20 from a general hospital and 115 from a psychiatric hospital), 134 other health professionals from the general hospital and 84 people from the general population. Results  Health professionals dehumanize the hospitalized patient more than the general population. The secure attachment acts protectively on self-dehumanization and negatively on the dehumanization of the hospitalized patient. Finally, autonomous people are not self-dehumanized. Conclusions Our findings indicate that measures should be taken for health professionals so that they do not dehumanize the patient.
ISSN:2168-8184
2168-8184
DOI:10.7759/cureus.20182