[Mental illnesses in childhood and adolescence: A bioethical view of the stigma they entail]

Vertex. 2015 Nov-Dec;26(124):405-13.
[Article in Spanish]

Abstract

Literature suggests that general beliefs towards mental illnesses are strongly correlated to the social behavior towards people who suffer them.

Objective: to explore beliefs and attitudes towards mental illnesses in children and adolescents and associate them to bioethics.

Materials and methods: exploratory, prospective and quantitative study. A questionnaire was administered to parents-tutors of children-adolescents with mental disorders, and to healthcare professionals of the Hospital de Niños de la Santísima Trinidad Córdoba (Argentina). Data processing was performed by means of frequency analysis.

Results: 68.5% of parents-tutors and 51.8% of healthcare professionals answered that mental illnesses are never considered like any other illness. Diagnose and treatment is perceived as a stigma by 25.9% of healthcare professionals. For 88.1% of parents-tutors and 9.8% of healthcare professionals, children and adolescents with mental illnesses are never dangerous. 77.1% of parents and 18.4% of professionals stated that people are never afraid of children-adolescents with MI. 42.8% of children-adolescents were excluded from school and 28.5% from family activities.

Conclusions: mental illness during childhood entails a stigma that compromises development, equal opportunity and human rights.

Publication types

  • English Abstract

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Bioethical Issues
  • Child
  • Humans
  • Mental Disorders*
  • Prospective Studies
  • Social Stigma*
  • Surveys and Questionnaires