Child Mental Health Literacy Among Vietnamese and Cambodian Mothers

被引:0
作者
Hoang-Minh Dang
Ratha Phan
Bahr Weiss
Tung Dang
Amie Pollack
Nam Tran
My Loc Nguyen
机构
[1] VNU University of Education,College of Social Sciences
[2] University of Cambodia,Peabody College of Education and Human Development
[3] Vanderbilt University,undefined
[4] Vinmec International Hospital,undefined
来源
Psychological Studies | 2021年 / 66卷
关键词
Mental health literacy; Children; Mothers; Vietnam; Cambodia;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Parents’ perceptions of their children’s mental health—including recognition of specific mental health problems as such, and their beliefs about the causes and treatments for the problems—have an important impact on child mental health. This study investigated child mental health literacy among Cambodian and Vietnamese mothers. A cross-sectional study was conducted among 357 mothers in Hanoi, Vietnam, and Pnom Penh and Kampong Speu, Cambodia. The Child Mental Health Literacy Questionnaire was used to assess mothers’ mental health literacy, in particular, their ability to correctly identify different mental health disorders, and their understanding of causes of the mental health problems, and about the utility of different treatments. The overall level of mental health literacy among mothers in these two countries was low, with the proportions of mothers able to correctly identify different mental health problems ranging from 0.17 (Oppositional Defiant Disorder) to 0.35 (Trauma-related). Biological causes and adverse experiences were the most frequently selected causes of generic mental health problems. Medication, parent training and family counseling were the three most positively rated forms of treatment for mental health problems in general. Although Vietnam and Cambodia are geographic neighbors, varying results across these countries appear to reflect their different historical backgrounds. For instance, the largest difference between the two countries was for trauma-related problems, which may be related to the Cambodian history of genocide. Findings such as this demonstrate the need for contextually developed and focused public health intervention for mothers of children to improve their mental health literacy.
引用
收藏
页码:62 / 72
页数:10
相关论文
共 111 条
  • [1] Abera M(2015)Parents’ perception of child and adolescent mental health problems and their choice of treatment option in southwest Ethiopia Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health 9 40-833
  • [2] Robbins JM(2017)Attitudes towards mental health and the integration of mental health services into primary health care: a cross-sectional survey among health-care workers in Lvea Em District, Cambodia Global Health Action 10 1331579-954
  • [3] Tesfaye M(2006)Anxiety in a neglected population: Prevalence of anxiety disorders in pre-adolescent children Clinical Psychology Review 26 817-582
  • [4] Alfredsson M(2008)Mental health literacy and attitudes in a Swedish community sample—Investigating the role of personal experience of mental health care BMC Public Health 8 125-98
  • [5] San Sebastian M(2018)Mental health literacy and intervention program adaptation in the internationalization of school psychology for Vietnam Psychology in the Schools 55 941-158
  • [6] Jeghannathan B(2011)Perceptions of mental health and help-seeking behavior in an urban community in Vietnam: An explorative study Community Mental Health Journal 47 574-678
  • [7] Cartwright-Hatton S(2014)Mental health literacy in non-western countries: A review of the recent literature Mental Health Review Journal 19 84-229
  • [8] McNicol K(2014)Mental health literacy: public knowledge and beliefs about mental disorders in mainland China PsyCh Journal 3 144-80
  • [9] Doubleday E(2006)Are patient expectations still relevant for psychotherapy process and outcome? Clinical Psychology Review 26 657-327
  • [10] Dahlberg KM(2006)Predicting treatment response for childhood attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: Introduction of a heuristic model to guide research Applied and Preventive Psychology 11 215-243