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A longitudinal study on the impact of mental health internship in reducing negative attitudes of medical students towards people with mental disorders

ABSTRACT

Objective

To evaluate and measure the effects of mental health internship on Medicine Students (MS) attitudes towards people with mental illness (PMI).

Methods

MS was submitted to an attitude questionnaire previously and after the mental health internship. Their attitudes were measured inside five factors: (F1) “social acceptance of PMI”, (F2) “normalizing roles for PMI”, (F3) “non-belief in supernatural causes for mental illness”, (F4) “belief in bio-psychosocial causes for mental illness,” and (F5) “near contact with PTM”. T-tests were used to evaluate factor differences, confounding factor were analyzed by ANOVA and correlations through Pearson’s correlation test.

Results

74 of 85 students responded. There were a significant reduction in four factors (F1, p < 0.001, F2, p = 0.002, F3, p = 0.04, F5, p < 0.001). An association between having a PMI friend and F3 was identified before the course (p = 0.04), but not after (p = 0.13). A positive correlation was identified between belief in disease improvement and negative F2 attitudes before course (p = 0.01), but not after (0.40). F5 was related with disease improvement after course (p < 0.001), suggesting positive attitudes when improvement is expected. There were an increase in improvement expectations after course for schizophrenia (p = 0.02), bipolar disorder (p = 0.03) and anxiety (p = 0.03).

Conclusions

Mental health internship was related to a decrease in negative attitudes towards PMI. Personal contact seems to influence this improvement. We believe that the reduction of fear toward PMI is more powerful to reduce stigma than the acquisition of knowledge about its natural causes. More studies with a regionally distinct population in Brazil and aimed to measure the impact of fear are necessary to confirm this hypothesis.

Internship and residency; medical students; attitude; mentally ill persons; psychiatry

Instituto de Psiquiatria da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro Av. Venceslau Brás, 71 Fundos, 22295-140 Rio de Janeiro - RJ Brasil, Tel./Fax: (55 21) 3873-5510 - Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
E-mail: editora@ipub.ufrj.br