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Social stigma among health-care providers toward patients with schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorders at tertiary hospital in Makkah, Saudi Arabia

Sami Saad (Department of Neuroscience, King Abdullah Medical City, Makkah, Saudi Arabia)
Jolan Ayman Bshawri (Public Health and Health Informatics College, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia)
Sara Mohammed Alsaedi (Public Health and Health Informatics College, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia)
Rahaf Emad Radi (Public Health and Health Informatics College, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia)
Raneem Marwan Ghonim (Public Health and Health Informatics College, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia)
Haya Mohammed Nasraldain (Public Health and Health Informatics College, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia)
Abdullah Abdulqadeer Gadeer (Department of Psychiatry, Ministry of National Guard Health Affairs, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia)

Mental Health Review Journal

ISSN: 1361-9322

Article publication date: 18 March 2022

Issue publication date: 11 August 2022

282

Abstract

Purpose

Several previous studies showed strong social stigma toward mental illness patients from the health-care providers (HCPs) in Saudi Arabia. This stigma affects the level of care provided by HCPs. Stigma is a major barrier in treating schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) patients. Thus, it is important to clarify the difference regarding the social stigma between both diagnoses. This study aimed to identify and compare the existence of social stigma among HCPs towards schizophrenia patients compared to OCD patients.

Design/methodology/approach

A total of 283 HCPs from King Abdullah Medical City (KAMC), Makkah, Saudi Arabia, were enrolled in this cross-sectional questionnaire-based study between middle and end of January 2021. The scale included a demographic questionnaire plus two vignette cases reflecting OCD and schizophrenia patients’ symptoms without mentioning diagnosis. Each case was followed with 18 questions, which measured some of the thoughts and attitudes of the social stigma of mental illnesses including negative stereotypes, discrimination, social distancing and emotional and cognitive prejudices against mental illness patients. The scale was validated by a pilot study (which included 15 other participants) with acceptable validity and reliability (Cronbach’s alpha: 81.4%).

Findings

Most participants’ responses were “low” in the total score of their stigma score for both diagnosis [OCD (84.1%), mean ± SD (1.15  ±  0.366) and schizophrenia (74.2%), mean ± SD (1.25  ±  0.438)]. However, those who responded “high” in their stigma score regarding the schizophrenia section were higher in their number than those who responded “high” in the OCD section (25.8% vs 15.9%). Most participants had “low” total stigma scores for both diagnoses [OCD (84.1%), mean ± SD (1.15  ±  0.366) and schizophrenia (74.2%), mean ± SD (1.25  ±  0.438)]. However, of those with “high” stigma score responses, more were for the schizophrenia section compared to the OCD section (25.8% vs 15.9%). Being flexible to recruit any of them was more related to promoting them if they deserve promotion. The sample that answered wrong regarding OCD vignette diagnosis and had “high” stigma score was higher (n = 40) than the sample that answered correctly and had “high” stigma score (n = 5). In contrast, the sample that answered wrong regarding the schizophrenia case diagnosis and had “high” stigma score (n = 41) was not significantly different in terms of its number compared to the one that answered correctly and had “high” stigma score (n = 32).

Research limitations/implications

One aspect that reduces the strength of this study is that the target number of the participants could not be reached, meaning a 95% confidence level with a ±5% margin of error could not be reached. Another limitation is the lack of contact between HCPs at the KAMC in Makkah with mental illness patients owing to lack of psychiatric inpatient departments. However, this limitation may be a strength for this study, as we were able to primarily measure medical HCPs rather than psychiatric HCPs. Although the vignette methodology in stigma studies has many benefits, the participants do not respond to real patients, and therefore miss appearance and other nonverbal cues that are typically present in real interactions.

Originality/value

The social stigma level among HCPs against schizophrenia patients is higher than that against OCD patients. The factor of knowing the diagnosis of the case has a positive effect on decreasing stigma toward OCD patients but not toward schizophrenia patients. Educational awareness about stigma against mental illness patients to HCPs, rather than focusing on increasing literature knowledge, may decrease stigma among HCPs.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Ethics approval and consent to participate: Ethical approval from the ethical committee at KAMC (Registration no. 20–742) was obtained. Written consent was not required because there were no personal identifiers. Consent was obtained orally from each physician while interviewing him/her. The data collectors did not obtain HCP’s name and/or contact information.Consent for publication: Obtained.Availability of data and material: Yes.Conflict of interest and funding: The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the study, authorship, and/or publication of this study. No funding was obtained for this study.Author contributions: SYS: conceptualization, methodology, data curation and writing/original draft preparation. JAB: methodology, software and data curation. HMN: writing/original draft preparation and editing of the final manuscript. RER: data curation, investigation, analysis and sharing in writing the manuscript. SMA: data curation, investigation and sharing in writing the manuscript. RMG: data curation, sharing in writing the manuscript. AAG: data curation and sharing in writing the manuscript.

Citation

Saad, S., Bshawri, J.A., Alsaedi, S.M., Radi, R.E., Ghonim, R.M., Nasraldain, H.M. and Gadeer, A.A. (2022), "Social stigma among health-care providers toward patients with schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorders at tertiary hospital in Makkah, Saudi Arabia", Mental Health Review Journal, Vol. 27 No. 3, pp. 281-294. https://doi.org/10.1108/MHRJ-11-2021-0078

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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