A Survey of the Attitudes of Nurses towards Caring for the Mentally Ill at a Rural General Hospital

Background: Mental illness is a global problem affecting millions of people. There has been an increase in the number of mentally ill persons who are treated in the general hospital setting due to decentralization of mental health services. Objectives: The purpose of the study is to explore the attitudes of nurses at a rural general hospital, with an aim to improve services offered to persons with mental illness. Methods: A descriptive study survey was carried out among nurses in a general hospital. The data was collected through a self-administered questionnaire which was taken from a previous study. Data was analyzed using SPSS® version 20. Results: A total of 84 questionnaires were administered with a response rate of 92.8%. All respondents were females with an average age of 35.7±8.3 years. Most of the nurses (42%) had 11-41 years of work experience. Most of the nurses (70.5%) had a negative attitude towards caring for the mentally ill. All nurses had psychiatric nursing in their basic training but only 98.7% had no additional training and 88% had no continuing education in psychiatric nursing. The majority (88%) of the nurses had a positive attitude towards the environment in which care is offered to the mentally ill. Conclusion: Most of the nurses surveyed had a negative attitude towards mental illness. There needs to be more trained psychiatric nurses in the hospital and continuing education sessions/workshops to reduce the negative attitudes of these nurses. More research is needed to have an in-depth understanding of the issues. patients with mental illness, and the quality care provided to those patients were of low standards [6]. A cross sectional study done across five European countries, found that nurses working in mental health in general have a more positive attitude towards persons with mental illness based on their country’ practice, gender and position. In Portugal, the nurses have a more positive attitude compared with Lithuania. These differences could be as a result of the organization of the psychiatric services in Portugal [7]. This study can be generalized as the study was done across five countries and a sample size of 810 nurses. The aim of this study is to investigate the attitude of nurses working in a general hospital towards the care of the mentally ill. The objectives are to determine nurses’ attitude towards care of the mentally ill patients in a general hospital; to describe the demographic characteristics of nurses working in a general hospital and to explore the nurse attitude to the environment in which care is offered to the mentally ill in a general hospital. about

[1]  H. Namdar,et al.  Mental illness stigma among nurses in psychiatric wards of teaching hospitals in the north-west of Iran , 2012, Iranian journal of nursing and midwifery research.

[2]  A. Ngirababyeyi Attitudes towards mentally ill in professionals working in Ndera neuropsychiatric hospital in Rwanda , 2012 .

[3]  Michelle C. Danda,et al.  Attitudes of Health Care Professionals Towards , 2012 .

[4]  W. Abel,et al.  Integrating mental health into primary care an integrative collaborative primary care model--the Jamaican experience. , 2011, The West Indian medical journal.

[5]  H. Minas,et al.  Attitudes of Malaysian general hospital staff towards patients with mental illness and diabetes , 2011, BMC public health.

[6]  M. Välimäki,et al.  Nurses' attitudes to mental illness: a comparison of a sample of nurses from five European countries. , 2010, International journal of nursing studies.

[7]  Aghukwa Nkereuwem Chikaodiri Attitude of health workers to the care of psychiatric patients , 2009, Annals of general psychiatry.

[8]  E. Goldner,et al.  Stigma, negative attitudes and discrimination towards mental illness within the nursing profession: a review of the literature. , 2009, Journal of psychiatric and mental health nursing.

[9]  A. Hamdan-Mansour,et al.  Attitudes of Jordanian Mental Health Nurses Toward Mental Illness and Patients with Mental Illness , 2009, Issues in mental health nursing.

[10]  T. Björkman,et al.  Attitudes towards people with mental illness: a cross-sectional study among nursing staff in psychiatric and somatic care. , 2008, Scandinavian journal of caring sciences.

[11]  J. Luty,et al.  Effectiveness of Changing Minds campaign factsheets in reducing stigmatised attitudes towards mental illness , 2007 .

[12]  N. Sartorius,et al.  At issue: Anti-stigma-endeavours , 2007, International review of psychiatry.

[13]  [Atlas of nurses in mental health]. , 2007, Assistenza infermieristica e ricerca : AIR.

[14]  L. Heatherington,et al.  Young Jamaicans' attitudes toward mental illness: Experimental and demographic factors associated with social distance and stigmatizing opinions , 2006 .

[15]  L. Fitzgerald,et al.  The mixed attitudes of nurse's to caring for people with mental illness in a rural general hospital. , 2005, International journal of mental health nursing.

[16]  K. Lützén,et al.  To Be a Nurse or a Neighbour? a moral concern for psychiatric nurses living next door to individuals with a mental illness , 2005, Nursing ethics.

[17]  Sing Lee,et al.  Experience of social stigma by people with schizophrenia in Hong Kong , 2005, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[18]  S. E. Tay,et al.  Nurses' attitudes toward people with mental illnesses in a psychiatric hospital in Singapore. , 2004, Journal of Psychosocial Nursing and Mental Health Services.

[19]  T. Mavundla,et al.  Professional nurses' perception of nursing mentally ill people in a general hospital setting. , 2000, Journal of advanced nursing.

[20]  C. Moorehead All rights reserved , 1997 .

[21]  D. Eker,et al.  Effect of Psychiatric Labels On Attitudes Toward Mental Illness in a Turkish Sample , 1994, The International journal of social psychiatry.