MedPath

Study on Mental Health-related Stigma

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Mental Health Disorder
Interventions
Other: Mental Health Literacy Programme
Registration Number
NCT05639855
Lead Sponsor
Nereida Canosa Rodríguez
Brief Summary

Mental disorders are currently among the main causes of disability worldwide. For this reason, various national and international organisations include the promotion of mental health among their strategic actions, with special emphasis on the fight against stigma. Evidence shows that stigma has a negative impact on the process of recovery and participation of people with mental disorders.

The general aim of this study is to find out about the attitudes of university students at the University of A Coruña towards people with mental disorders and specifically to intervene with students of the Bachelor's Degree in Occupational Therapy to assess whether taking part in a Mental Health Literacy Programme changes these attitudes.

Detailed Description

In recent years, there has been a growing interest in developing and evaluating anti-stigma plans in the field of mental health. However, stigmatising, coercive or paternalistic attitudes persist in society and have a negative impact on the recovery process of people with mental illness.

The Mental Health Spain Confederation proposes tackling stigma through intersectional mental health literacy interventions that incorporate the gender perspective and are focused on the needs identified by people with mental disorders.

The New Mental Health Strategy of the National Health System (2021-2026) establishes the need to involve people and their families, as well as the different social agents in the fight against stigma, especially social and health professionals, as well as the media and educational personnel. The aim of this study is to understand the nature of stigma towards people with mental disorders. In order to do so, it is necessary to take into consideration the experiences and experiences of the people themselves in order to develop plans to promote mental health from a participatory and comprehensive perspective. Likewise, it is considered relevant to know the perceptions of future professionals from different areas of knowledge (students of the University of A Coruña), evaluating their attitudes and beliefs regarding mental health. Finally, the aim is to evaluate the impact of incorporating a specific module on mental health and stigmatisation. a specific module on mental health and stigma in the university curriculum of the students of the Occupational Therapy Degree.

This research has the following objectives: (1) find out the perception of people with mental disorders in relation to the social stigma of citizens and Health Science professionals; (2) find out how university students perceive people with mental health problems, and (3) evaluate the impact of incorporating a specific module on mental health and stigma in the university curriculum, specifically in the Bachelor's Degree in Occupational Therapy.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
740
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SEQUENTIAL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Third year students of the Bachelor's Degree in Occupational TherapyMental Health Literacy ProgrammeThird-year students of the Bachelor's Degree in Occupational Therapy will receive training on a specific module on mental health and stigma in the university curriculum.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Changes on the measurement of stigmatizing attitudes towards people with mental health disorders in students of third-year of occupational therapy bachelor's degreeOne month pre-intervention and one month post-intervention

It is a Likert-type scale with 27 items on the situation posed, grouped into 9 factors: responsibility, pity, anger, dangerousness, fear, help, coercion, segregation and avoidance. I sum the items of each factor, obtaining a minimum of 3 and a maximum of 27.

Changes on the measurement of the students of third-year of occupational therapy bachelor's degree attitudes and beliefs toward people with mental disordersOne month pre-intervention and one month post-intervention

It is composed of 40 items, rated on a 5-point Likert scale, ranging from strongly agree to strongly disagree. The scale comprises 4 factors: authoritarianism, benevolence, social restraint, and mental health ideology in the community. Each factor contains 10 statements concerning opinions about the way people with mental disorder are treated. Five of the 10 items are expressed in the positive and the other 5 are worded in the negative. The score for each subscale results from adding the positive items together with the negative items, which are transformed into positive values, with the total score being the sum of all of them. The higher the score, the greater the agreement. The sum of each factor is analyzed with the mean and standard deviation.

Acquired knowledge in students of third-year of occupational therapy bachelor's degree who participated in the intervention programmewithin 1 month after the intervention

The interview is the most used data collection technique in qualitative studies. In this study, a semi-structured interview will be used because it is flexible and dynamic. It's a beginning interview to know the knowledge acquired by the students.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Individual-interviewswithin 1 month after the intervention

The interviews were about the experiences of people with mental disorders in relation to stigma. The following questions composed the interview: the definition of stigma, the influence of society on people with a mental health disorder, experiences about the barriers detected in daily life, and the behavior of the health providers that work with people with a mental health disorder.

Measurement of the Students of University of A Coruña attitudes and beliefs toward people with mental disorderswithin 1 month after the intervention

It is composed of 40 items, rated on a 5-point Likert scale, ranging from strongly agree to strongly disagree. The scale comprises 4 factors: authoritarianism, benevolence, social restraint and mental health ideology in the community. Each factor contains 10 statements concerning opinions about the way people with mental disorder are treated. Five of the 10 items are expressed in the positive and the other 5 are worded in the negative. The score for each subscale results from adding the positive items together with the negative items, which are transformed into positive values, with the total score being the sum of all of them.

Measurement of stigmatizing attitudes towards people with mental health disorders of the Students of University of A Coruñawithin 1 month after the intervention

It is a Likert-type scale with 27 items on the situation posed, grouped into 9 factors: responsibility, pity, anger, dangerousness, fear, help, coercion, segregation and avoidance. I sum the items of each factor, obtaining a minimum of 3 and a maximum of 27.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Nereida Canosa Domínguez

🇪🇸

A Coruña, Spain

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