General practitioners' beliefs about people with schizophrenia and whether they should be subject to discriminatory treatment when in medical hospital: the mediating role of dangerousness perception
Article
Magliano, Lorenza, Punzo, Rosanna, Strino, Antonella, Acone, Roberta and Read, J. 2016. General practitioners' beliefs about people with schizophrenia and whether they should be subject to discriminatory treatment when in medical hospital: the mediating role of dangerousness perception. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry. 87 (5), pp. 559-566. https://doi.org/10.1037/ort0000217
Authors | Magliano, Lorenza, Punzo, Rosanna, Strino, Antonella, Acone, Roberta and Read, J. |
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Abstract | This study explored the relationships between General Practitioners’ (GPs) beliefs about People With Schizophrenia (PWS) and GPs’ recommendations regarding restrictions for such people when in medical (nonpsychiatric) hospital, and whether these relationships were mediated by dangerousness perception. There were 322 randomly selected Italian GPs who completed a questionnaire measuring beliefs about PWS. Structural Equation Model (SEM) was used to explore the effects of these beliefs on the GPs’ views about the need for restrictive rules in hospital. Thirty-1 percent of GPs firmly believed that, in medical wards, PWS should be supervised and 18% that they should be separated from other patients. SEM revealed that belief in such differential treatment was positively related to a belief that PWS need medication for the rest of their lives, and to perceptions of others’ need for social distance, and of dangerousness. Dangerousness was, in turn, positively related to the belief that PWS need medication for their lives, and to a perception of the need for social distance, but negatively related to perceived capacity to report health problems. Analyses of indirect effects showed that the relationships of belief in discriminatory treatment with belief in medication for life and with perceived social distance were mediated by perceived dangerousness. GPs’ attitudes about PWS appear closely with their beliefs on discriminatory behaviors in hospital, and the mediating role of dangerousness perceptions. Providing GPs with education about schizophrenia treatments and prognosis, and countering stereotypes about dangerousness, could be helpful to reduce GPs’ beliefs in the need for discriminatory treatment of PWS. |
Keywords | stigma; general practitioners; schizophrenia; general hospital; discriminatory behaviors; dangerousness |
Journal | American Journal of Orthopsychiatry |
Journal citation | 87 (5), pp. 559-566 |
ISSN | 0002-9432 |
1939-0025 | |
Year | 2016 |
Publisher | American Psychological Association for American Journal of Orthopsychiatry |
Accepted author manuscript | |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1037/ort0000217 |
Publication dates | |
15 Dec 2016 | |
Publication process dates | |
Deposited | 10 Feb 2017 |
Accepted | 19 Aug 2016 |
Copyright information | © 2016 APA. This is an accepted manuscript of the article. This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record. |
License | All rights reserved |
https://repository.uel.ac.uk/item/84y40
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