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Devaluation Towards People With Schizophrenia in Italian Medical, Nursing, and Psychology Students

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

A.U. Verdina
Affiliation:
Section of Psychiatry, Experimental Biomedicine and Clinical Neuroscience, Palermo, Italy
F. Seminerio
Affiliation:
Section of Psychiatry, Experimental Biomedicine and Clinical Neuroscience, Palermo, Italy
M.V. Barone
Affiliation:
Section of Psychiatry, Experimental Biomedicine and Clinical Neuroscience, Palermo, Italy
C. La Cascia
Affiliation:
Section of Psychiatry, Experimental Biomedicine and Clinical Neuroscience, Palermo, Italy
C. Sartorio
Affiliation:
Section of Psychiatry, Experimental Biomedicine and Clinical Neuroscience, Palermo, Italy
A. Mule
Affiliation:
Section of Psychiatry, Experimental Biomedicine and Clinical Neuroscience, Palermo, Italy
C. Guccione
Affiliation:
Section of Psychiatry, Experimental Biomedicine and Clinical Neuroscience, Palermo, Italy
D. La Barbera
Affiliation:
Section of Psychiatry, Experimental Biomedicine and Clinical Neuroscience, Palermo, Italy

Abstract

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Introduction

Discrimination towards people with schizophrenia (PWS) by healthcare professionals is responsible of underdiagnosis and undertreatment of these patients. Negative attitudes toward PSW in health care professionals tend to be present since their university studies and are related to their knowledge and experience about the disease.

Objectives and aims

To assess opinion towards PSW in medical, nursing and psychology students and to investigate the relation with their knowledge of schizophrenia and its causes.

Methods

The study involved 133 medical, 200 nursing and 296 psychology undergraduate students. The opinion on mental illness questionnaire, the Devaluation Consumers Scale, and the Devaluation of Consumer Families Scale were administered to the sample. ANOVA and ANCOVA were used to test differences between groups and the relation between causal explanation of schizophrenia and discrimination towards PWS.

Results

Psychology students were more aware than the other student of public stigma towards PWS and their families (F 12.57, P < 0.001; F 32.69, P < 0.001) and expressed a more positive view on treatments’ effectiveness (F 30.74, P < 0.001). Psychology (OR 0.48, 95% CI 0.26–0.88) and nursing (OR 0.29, 95% CI 0.15–0.55) students were more likely to identify psychological and social risk factors as more frequent causes of schizophrenia (vs. biogenetics) and these, in turn, were related to a better opinion towards social equality of PWS.

Conclusions

These preliminary findings underline the relevance of biopsychosocial model of schizophrenia within stigma-reduction programs for health science students.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-Poster Walk: Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders–Part 4
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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