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  • Title: [Relatives' beliefs and attitudes towards schizophrenia: an epidemiological investigation].
    Author: Sağduyu A, Aker T, Ozmen E, Uğuz S, Ogel K, Tamar D.
    Journal: Turk Psikiyatri Derg; 2003; 14(3):203-12. PubMed ID: 14569471.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: To examine relatives' beliefs and attitudes towards schizophrenia. METHOD: Data were derived from the demographic and schizophrenia modules of the questionnaire developed for the survey called "Attitudes Towards Mental Disorders". The questionnaire was administered 98 adult relatives of schizophrenic patients who had participated in psychiatric outpatient treatment programs in Istanbul, Izmir and Adana. RESULTS: Although all identified the case described as a mental disorder, only 76.5% determined the term schizophrenia as a mental disorder. Social problems (62.9%) and weakness of will (65.3%) were the most commonly endorsed causes of schizophrenia. Almost all of the respondents preferred medical methods and psychiatrists for the treatment of schizophrenic patients. 72.2% of the sample held the opinion that people with schizophrenia are dangerous and 91.8% believed that these patients could not take responsibility for their own lives. The attitudes of the subjects living in Istanbul and those who stated that "schizophrenia is an illness or a mental disorder" were more negative than the others with respect to social distance characteristics. CONCLUSION: Most of the relatives of schizophrenic patients identified a mental disorder when a schizophrenia case was described, but they had insufficient information about the term schizophrenia. Labeling patients as mentally ill had a negative effect on relatives' attitudes towards schizophrenia. The results of this study underlined the need for education programs for the relatives of patients, and the demands of the relatives concerning treatment modalities with psychosocial components.
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