학술논문

Leaving the stigma to the patients? Frequency of crisis experiences among mental health professionals in Berlin and Brandenburg and how they cope with it.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Mental Health. Feb2024, Vol. 33 Issue 1, p66-74. 9p.
Subject
*PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology
*MENTAL health personnel
*ATTITUDES toward mental illness
*OCCUPATIONAL roles
*ATTITUDE (Psychology)
*SELF-perception
*ATTITUDES of medical personnel
*GROUP identity
*HELP-seeking behavior
*PSYCHODYNAMIC psychotherapy
*SOCIAL stigma
*IMPAIRED medical personnel
*SUICIDAL ideation
*MEDICAL care use
*PSYCHOSOCIAL factors
*PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation
*PATIENT-professional relations
*PSYCHIATRIC hospitals
*PSYCHIATRIC treatment
Language
ISSN
0963-8237
Abstract
Although mental health professionals' mental health problems are gaining increased attention, there is little systematic research on this topic. This study investigated the frequency of crisis experiences among mental health professionals and examined how they approach these experiences in terms of their personal and social identities. An online survey was conducted among mental health professionals in 18 psychiatric hospital departments in the German federal states of Berlin and Brandenburg (N = 215), containing questions about personal crisis experiences, help sought, service use, meaningfulness of lived experiences, causal beliefs of mental illness and psychotherapeutic orientation. Social identification was assessed via semantic differential scales derived from preliminary interview studies. To investigate relationships between the variables, explorative correlation analyses were calculated. Results showed a high frequency rate of crisis experiences, substantial rates of suicidal ideation and incapacity to work and high service use. Most participants regarded their experiences as meaningful for their personal identity. Meaningfulness was positively related to a psychosocial causation model of mental illness, to psychodynamic psychotherapeutic orientation and to a high degree of disidentification with users and crisis experienced colleagues. The (paradoxical) disintegration of personal and social identity of may be understood as a strategy to avoid stigmatization. A more challenging coping style among professionals is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]