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AuthorFekih-Romdhane, Feten
AuthorJahrami, Haitham
AuthorStambouli, Manel
AuthorAlhuwailah, Amthal
AuthorHelmy, Mai
AuthorShuwiekh, Hanaa Ahmed Mohamed
AuthorLemine, Cheikh Mohamed fadel Mohamed
AuthorRadwan, Eqbal
AuthorSaquib, Juliann
AuthorSaquib, Nazmus
AuthorFawaz, Mirna
AuthorZarrouq, Btissame
AuthorNaser, Abdallah Y.
AuthorObeid, Sahar
AuthorHallit, Souheil
AuthorSaleh, Maan
AuthorHaider, Sanad
AuthorDaher-Nashif, Suhad
AuthorMiloud, Lahmer
AuthorBadrasawi, Manal
AuthorHamdan-Mansour, Ayman
AuthorBarbato, Mariapaola
AuthorBakhiet, Aisha
AuthorSayem, Najat
AuthorAdawi, Samir
AuthorGrein, Fatheya
AuthorCherif, Wissal
AuthorChalghaf, Nasr
AuthorHusni, Mariwan
AuthorAlrasheed, Maha M.
AuthorCheour, Majda
Available date2023-03-28T11:13:43Z
Publication Date2022-12-30
Publication NameSocial Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00127-022-02403-x
CitationFekih-Romdhane, F., Jahrami, H., Stambouli, M., Alhuwailah, A., Helmy, M., Shuwiekh, H. A. M., ... & Cheour, M. (2022). Cross-cultural comparison of mental illness stigma and help-seeking attitudes: a multinational population-based study from 16 Arab countries and 10,036 individuals. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 1-16.
ISSN0933-7954
URIhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85145270562&origin=inward
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/41402
AbstractBackground: There is evidence that culture deeply affects beliefs about mental illnesses' causes, treatment, and help-seeking. We aimed to explore and compare knowledge, attitudes toward mental illness and help-seeking, causal attributions, and help-seeking recommendations for mental illnesses across various Arab countries and investigate factors related to attitudes toward help-seeking. Methods: We carried out a multinational cross-sectional study using online self-administered surveys in the Arabic language from June to November 2021 across 16 Arab countries among participants from the general public. Results: More than one in four individuals exhibited stigmatizing attitudes towards mental illness (26.5%), had poor knowledge (31.7%), and hold negative attitudes toward help-seeking (28.0%). ANOVA tests revealed a significant difference between countries regarding attitudes (F = 194.8, p <.001), knowledge (F = 88.7, p <.001), and help-seeking attitudes (F = 32.4, p <.001). Three multivariate regression analysis models were performed for overall sample, as well as Palestinian and Sudanese samples that displayed the lowest and highest ATSPPH-SF scores, respectively. In the overall sample, being female, older, having higher knowledge and more positive attitudes toward mental illness, and endorsing biomedical and psychosocial causations were associated with more favorable help-seeking attitudes; whereas having a family psychiatric history and endorsing religious/supernatural causations were associated with more negative help-seeking attitudes. The same results have been found in the Palestinian sample, while only stigma dimensions helped predict help-seeking attitudes in Sudanese participants. Conclusion: Interventions aiming at improving help-seeking attitudes and behaviors and promoting early access to care need to be culturally tailored, and congruent with public beliefs about mental illnesses and their causations.
Languageen
PublisherSpringer
SubjectCausal attributions
Help-seeking
Mental illness
Stigma
The Arab world
TitleCross-cultural comparison of mental illness stigma and help-seeking attitudes: a multinational population-based study from 16 Arab countries and 10,036 individuals
TypeArticle
Pagination1-16
ESSN1433-9285


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