The relationship between mental-health-related stigma among psychiatrists and country indicators across Europe
D. Őri, P. Szocsics, T. Molnár, L. Bankovska Motlova, O. Kazakova, S. Mörkl, M. Wallies, M. Abdulhakim, S. Boivin, K. Bruna, C. Cabaços, E. A. Carbone, E. Dashi, G. Grech, S. Greguras, I. Ivanovic, K. Guevara, S. Kakar, K. Kotsis, I. M. I. Klinkby, J. Maslak, S. Matheiken

TL;DR
This study explores how psychiatrists in Europe view mental health stigma and how these views relate to country-level factors like culture and development.
Contribution
The study empirically links psychiatrist stigma toward mental health with national cultural and development indicators across Europe.
Findings
Stigma among psychiatrists correlates with cultural dimensions like indulgence and long-term orientation.
High-stigma countries are associated with higher power distance and uncertainty avoidance.
Human Development Index and Democracy Index also show significant correlations with stigma levels.
Abstract
Mental health-related stigma occurs not only within the public community but is also an issue among healthcare professionals. The relationship between national culture and provider stigma remains yet to be empirically attested. We performed a cross-sectional multicentre study across 32 European countries to investigate the attitudes of psychiatrists towards patients with mental health problems. We aimed to examine the relationship of attitude with country-specific indicators. We measured stigmatizing attitudes using the Opening Minds Stigma Scale for Health Care Providers (OMS-HC) within an online survey among specialists and trainees in general adult, child and adolescent psychiatry. Its total score was correlated with the Human Development Index (HDI), the Democracy Index (DI), the Social Progress Index (SPI), the number of psychiatrists per 100,000 people, and the Hofstede…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health Treatment and Access
