Beliefs about the cause of schizophrenia among caregivers in Midwestern Nigeria

Osayi Igberase (Shepherd Hospital and Fertility Center, Warri, Delta State;)
Esther Okogbenin (Department of Psychiatry, Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital, Irrua, Edo State, Nigeria)

Mental Illness

ISSN: 2036-7465

Article publication date: 22 March 2017

375
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Abstract

Schizophrenia is a devastating illness with a chronic and relapsing course. While Western countries may endorse, biological and psychosocial causes more commonly than supernatural causes, non-western cultures like Nigeria in contrast, tend to endorse supernatural causes. Belief in supernatural causes has been reported to have consequences for treatment seeking behavior. This study aimed to examine the causes of schizophrenia reported by family members of outpatients with schizophrenia in a neuropsychiatric hospital in Midwestern Nigeria. In this study, we recruited a convenient sample of 200 consecutive caregivers of patients visiting the outpatient department of the Psychiatric Hospital, Benin City, Nigeria. These primary caregivers were unpaid relatives who provided support to patients. The patients were service users who fulfilled the diagnostic criteria of the International Classification of Disease [ICD-10; World Health Organization 1993] for schizophrenia and had been on treatment for at least two years. Majority (72.0%) of caregivers endorsed supernatural causes as most important in the etiology of schizophrenia, while 28.0% endorsed natural causes. Every participant without formal education endorsed supernatural attribution. In our study, it was evident that participants embraced multiple causal attributions for schizophrenia.

Keywords

Citation

Igberase, O. and Okogbenin, E. (2017), "Beliefs about the cause of schizophrenia among caregivers in Midwestern Nigeria", Mental Illness, Vol. 9 No. 1, pp. 23-27. https://doi.org/10.1108/mi.2017.6983

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017 O. Igberase and E. Okogbenin

License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).


Corresponding author

Osayi O. Igberase, Delta State University Teaching Hospital, Oghara, Delta Sate, Nigeria.

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