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The Promotion of Mental Health and Prevention of First-Episode Psychosis: A Pilot and Feasibility Non-Randomised Clinical Trial

Background: Mental-health-related stigma prevents active help seeking and therefore early therapeutic approaches and the recovery of functionality. National and international agencies recommend the implementation of prevention and mental health promotion programs that support the elimination of stig...

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Autores principales: Santonja Ayuso, Lucia, Ruiz-Hontangas, Antonio, Cervantes, José Javier González, Martínez, Concepción Martínez, Pons, Eva Gil, Pons, Sonia Ciscar, Pejó, Laura Andreu, Carmona-Simarro, José Vicente
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10671828/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37998318
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20227087
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author Santonja Ayuso, Lucia
Ruiz-Hontangas, Antonio
Cervantes, José Javier González
Martínez, Concepción Martínez
Pons, Eva Gil
Pons, Sonia Ciscar
Pejó, Laura Andreu
Carmona-Simarro, José Vicente
author_facet Santonja Ayuso, Lucia
Ruiz-Hontangas, Antonio
Cervantes, José Javier González
Martínez, Concepción Martínez
Pons, Eva Gil
Pons, Sonia Ciscar
Pejó, Laura Andreu
Carmona-Simarro, José Vicente
author_sort Santonja Ayuso, Lucia
collection PubMed
description Background: Mental-health-related stigma prevents active help seeking and therefore early therapeutic approaches and the recovery of functionality. National and international agencies recommend the implementation of prevention and mental health promotion programs that support the elimination of stigma in the classroom, since most mental health problems usually start in the adolescent stage. In view of the evidence that teachers present stigmatizing attitudes towards mental health, it has been considered as convenient to carry out an anti-stigma program with the main objective of evaluating the impact of an intervention based on the education and promotion of mental health, aimed at teachers and counsellors of a secondary school. The specific objectives were to get to know which were the most stigmatising attitudes that prevailed in the sample before and after the intervention; to evaluate the knowledge of the teaching staff and counsellors on psychosis before the intervention; to analyse correlations between clinically relevant variables; and assess whether this programme was beneficial and feasible for alphabetising counsellors/teachers of educational centres on stigma and FEP. Methods: This was a non-randomised clinical trial in which a nursing intervention was performed. Tools: a psychosis test (pre), Stigma Attribution Questionnaire (AQ-27) (pre-post), and satisfaction survey (post) were used. The inferential analysis included the Wilcoxon and the Pearson Correlation Test. Results: In the sample (n = 22), the predominant stigmatising attitude was “Help”. The p-values obtained in the Wilcoxon Test were statistically significant, except for “Responsibility” and “Pity”. The following constructs of interest were faced: “Fear”–“Age” and “Professional experience”; and “Help”–“Psychosis test”. Conclusions: Despite the scores obtained in “Responsibility” and “Pity”, the intervention was useful for reducing stigma in the sample. Implications for the profession: There are adolescents who have suffered stigma from their teachers, and consequently have minimized their symptoms and not asked for help. For this reason, we implemented a nursing intervention based on the education and promotion of mental health, with the aim of expanding knowledge and reducing stigma. In fact, this intervention, which we carried out on high school teachers, managed to reduce the majority of stigmatizing attitudes measured on the stigma attribution scale.
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spelling pubmed-106718282023-11-20 The Promotion of Mental Health and Prevention of First-Episode Psychosis: A Pilot and Feasibility Non-Randomised Clinical Trial Santonja Ayuso, Lucia Ruiz-Hontangas, Antonio Cervantes, José Javier González Martínez, Concepción Martínez Pons, Eva Gil Pons, Sonia Ciscar Pejó, Laura Andreu Carmona-Simarro, José Vicente Int J Environ Res Public Health Article Background: Mental-health-related stigma prevents active help seeking and therefore early therapeutic approaches and the recovery of functionality. National and international agencies recommend the implementation of prevention and mental health promotion programs that support the elimination of stigma in the classroom, since most mental health problems usually start in the adolescent stage. In view of the evidence that teachers present stigmatizing attitudes towards mental health, it has been considered as convenient to carry out an anti-stigma program with the main objective of evaluating the impact of an intervention based on the education and promotion of mental health, aimed at teachers and counsellors of a secondary school. The specific objectives were to get to know which were the most stigmatising attitudes that prevailed in the sample before and after the intervention; to evaluate the knowledge of the teaching staff and counsellors on psychosis before the intervention; to analyse correlations between clinically relevant variables; and assess whether this programme was beneficial and feasible for alphabetising counsellors/teachers of educational centres on stigma and FEP. Methods: This was a non-randomised clinical trial in which a nursing intervention was performed. Tools: a psychosis test (pre), Stigma Attribution Questionnaire (AQ-27) (pre-post), and satisfaction survey (post) were used. The inferential analysis included the Wilcoxon and the Pearson Correlation Test. Results: In the sample (n = 22), the predominant stigmatising attitude was “Help”. The p-values obtained in the Wilcoxon Test were statistically significant, except for “Responsibility” and “Pity”. The following constructs of interest were faced: “Fear”–“Age” and “Professional experience”; and “Help”–“Psychosis test”. Conclusions: Despite the scores obtained in “Responsibility” and “Pity”, the intervention was useful for reducing stigma in the sample. Implications for the profession: There are adolescents who have suffered stigma from their teachers, and consequently have minimized their symptoms and not asked for help. For this reason, we implemented a nursing intervention based on the education and promotion of mental health, with the aim of expanding knowledge and reducing stigma. In fact, this intervention, which we carried out on high school teachers, managed to reduce the majority of stigmatizing attitudes measured on the stigma attribution scale. MDPI 2023-11-20 /pmc/articles/PMC10671828/ /pubmed/37998318 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20227087 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Santonja Ayuso, Lucia
Ruiz-Hontangas, Antonio
Cervantes, José Javier González
Martínez, Concepción Martínez
Pons, Eva Gil
Pons, Sonia Ciscar
Pejó, Laura Andreu
Carmona-Simarro, José Vicente
The Promotion of Mental Health and Prevention of First-Episode Psychosis: A Pilot and Feasibility Non-Randomised Clinical Trial
title The Promotion of Mental Health and Prevention of First-Episode Psychosis: A Pilot and Feasibility Non-Randomised Clinical Trial
title_full The Promotion of Mental Health and Prevention of First-Episode Psychosis: A Pilot and Feasibility Non-Randomised Clinical Trial
title_fullStr The Promotion of Mental Health and Prevention of First-Episode Psychosis: A Pilot and Feasibility Non-Randomised Clinical Trial
title_full_unstemmed The Promotion of Mental Health and Prevention of First-Episode Psychosis: A Pilot and Feasibility Non-Randomised Clinical Trial
title_short The Promotion of Mental Health and Prevention of First-Episode Psychosis: A Pilot and Feasibility Non-Randomised Clinical Trial
title_sort promotion of mental health and prevention of first-episode psychosis: a pilot and feasibility non-randomised clinical trial
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10671828/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37998318
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20227087
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