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Differences In The Attitudes Of Clinical And Pre-clinical Medical Students To Mental Illness

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

O. Adekunte*
Affiliation:
Northumberland-Tyne and Wear NHS FT, Medical Education, Newcastle, United Kingdom
C. Oliver
Affiliation:
Newcastle University, Medical School, Newcastle, United Kingdom
B. Owen
Affiliation:
Northumberland-Tyne and Wear NHS FT, Medical Education, Newcastle, United Kingdom
*
*Corresponding author.

Abstract

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Background

The quality of care provided to psychiatry patients by doctors can be influenced by attitudes towards mental illness. Equally important is the attitude of medical students as future treating doctors towards mental illness. This survey compares the differences in the attitudes of pre-clinical and clinical years student to mental illness.

Aims

To compare attitudes of pre-clinical and clinical medical students’ to mental illness.

Methods

A cross-sectional survey of 212 clinical students (CS) and pre-clinical students (PS) at Newcastle University. Each responded anonymously to an electronic questionnaire. The responses take the form of: Yes/No, free text, order of preference, and Likert scale. Results were analysed based on basic statistical analysis.

Results

Little differences exist between the 2 groups in their beliefs that psychiatric patients are not difficult to like, mental illness can be a result of social adversity, psychiatry patients often recover and that people with mental illness should be offered a job with responsibility. However, 54% PS disagreed that mental illness often leads to violence, compared to 66% CS and 87% of PS identified that mental illness can be genetic in origin compared with CS of 91%.

Conclusion

This survey did not identify any significant difference between the attitudes of pre-clinical and clinical students in most of the domains. However, a higher percentage of clinical students associate violence with mental illness and are unwilling to consider an elective period in psychiatry.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
EV584
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2016
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