Stigma, Social Clinical Trial
Official title:
Reducing Stigma Towards Psychiatry Among Medical Students: a Multicenter Controlled Trial
This study examines the effect of including a novel Anti-stigma Intervention Curriculum
(ASIC) during a clinical rotation in psychiatry during medical school. It addresses stigma in
medical students' perceptions of psychiatric patients, psychiatric illnesses and treatments,
and the knowledge base of psychiatry in clinical practice.
Medical students from eight hospitals were divided into intervention (one hospital, n=57) and
control (seven hospitals, n=163) arms at the beginning of a 6-week psychiatry rotation
throughout one academic year (2017/18). The students completed the Attitudes to Psychiatry
scale (ATP-30) and the Attitudes toward Mental Illness scale (AMI) at rotation onset and
conclusion. The ASIC was designed to target prejudices and stigma by direct informal
encounters with people with severe mental illness (SMI) during periods of remission and
recovery. Supervised small group discussions followed those encounters in order to facilitate
processing of thoughts and emotions that ensued, and to discuss salient topics, including
psychiatric care, evidence-based medicine in psychiatry, and the neuroscientific
underpinnings of clinical psychiatry.
Design and participants- This study used a controlled trial design. The study population
consisted of medical students during their six-week psychiatry clerkship. The study was
conducted between November 2017 and July 2018 in eight academic hospitals in central Israel.
There were 16 groups of students.
The intervention arm included 3 groups of students (n=57) at a single general hospital, and
the control group was comprised of 13 groups of students (n=163) from six psychiatric
hospitals (n=139) and one general hospital (n=24). All students were informed that the
purpose of the study was to explore their attitudes about people with mental illness and
about psychiatry in general at the beginning (baseline) and at the end (endpoint) of their
rotation. The participants were assured that their responses would remain confidential, and
that they would not influence their rotation grade.
Procedure - The intervention and control groups received the same lecture and practical
training components. Topics covered in the lectures included psychopathology,
psychopharmacological treatment, psychotherapy, and forensic psychiatry. Practical training
included participation in inpatient rounds, visits at outpatient clinics and
consultation-liaison services, and seminars consisting of patient interviews and discussions
of clinical cases. All students were placed in a psychiatric ward, under the supervision and
responsibility of psychiatric residents and senior psychiatrists. Each ward had a range of 4
to 7 students assigned to it. During the rotation, students assumed supervised clinical
responsibility for at least one clinical case. Although all students were exposed to a
variety of patients in different clinical scenarios, they were exposed mostly to acutely ill
inpatients.
Study intervention The Anti-Stigma Interventions Curriculum (ASIC) component that was added
to the intervention group was designed to target stigma towards psychiatric patients,
psychiatric treatment, and the knowledge base of clinical practice in psychiatry. A first
part, aimed at reducing stigma towards psychiatric patients, consisted of two forms of direct
encounters with individuals with serious mental illness (SMI) in recovery or rehabilitation:
1) A two-hour panel of three people who shared their personal stories as consumers of mental
health services, followed by an open discussion with the students; and 2) A visit to a
rehabilitation center, which included direct contact with the consumers. The emphasis in both
of those encounters was on exposing students to the competence and strengths of the
individuals, rather than to the symptoms and signs of their underlying illnesses. The second
part, which was designed to target stigma towards psychiatric treatment and the knowledge
base of clinical practice in psychiatry, included small group discussions (20 minutes each)
on the efficacy of different treatments, the clinical utility of admission to inpatient
wards, evidence-based medicine in psychiatry, and the biological pathways underpinning
psychiatric disorders.
The study was conducted after receiving Helsinki ethics committee approval for a multicenter
study from the University of Tel Aviv Institutional Review Board. Because the ethics
committee approval was contingent on personal information being de-identified, the
investigators only used aggregate, unpaired pre- and post-rotation data.
Study evaluations Participants completed one socio-demographic and two self-report
questionnaires, the Attitudes to Psychiatry (ATP-30)22, and the Attitudes to Mental Illness
(AMI)7, which were administrated through a secured online server (SurveyMonkey®). The ATP-30
consists of 30 items, and it measures medical students' attitudes towards eight different
attitudinal domains: 1) Psychiatric patients; 2) Psychiatric illness; 3) Psychiatric
treatment; 4) Psychiatric institutions; 5) Psychiatric knowledge base in clinical practice;
6) Psychiatric education; 7) Psychiatry as a career choice; and 8) Psychiatrists. The AMI
consists of 20 items, and it measures medical students' attitudes to mental illnesses and,
more specifically, towards their causes, treatments, and impact on individuals and society.
Each item in both questionnaires is rated on a 5-point Likert scale ranging from strongly
agree to strongly disagree. Some items are negatively phrased in order to minimize the
likelihood of social desirability bias, and higher composite scores indicate more favorable
attitudes (less stigma) toward mental illness. Both ATP-30 and AMI have been shown to have
good psychometric properties, and both have been translated into many languages and used in
many countries worldwide.7,22
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