Social Perceptions About Community Life with People with Mental Illness: Study of a Discharge Program in Buenos Aires Province, Argentina
- 26 June 2014
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Science and Business Media LLC in Community Mental Health Journal
- Vol. 51 (1), 103-110
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10597-014-9753-4
Abstract
Effects of living near people with mental illness in community settings have been researched as part of psychiatric reform evaluation. However, these studies have been carried out mostly in industrialized countries, where social contexts differ from those in which psychiatric reform is now being implemented. To analyze the effects of community life with people with mental illness in the neighborhoods in which they live, in Buenos Aires, Argentina. A questionnaire was administered to randomly-selected neighbors of group homes of a discharge program and an equivalent control area (n = 236). Data was analyzed both quantitatively and qualitatively. Significant differences were found between being a neighbor and having a high degree of acceptance toward people with mental illness. In addition, significant associations were found between neighbors having a high-perceived social cohesion and having a high level of acceptance toward the mentally ill. Living near people with mental illness is associated with better acceptance toward them; these results are congruent with those results found in other cultural contexts.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- [P.R.E.A. (Rehabilitation and Assisted Outpatient Care Program): an alternate experience to the "Asylum Logic"].2009
- Balancing community-basedand hospital-based mental health care.2002
- Managed care in Latin America: the new common sense in health policy reformSocial Science & Medicine, 2001
- Neighbors' perceptions of group homes.Community Mental Health Journal, 1997
- What do the neighbors think now? Community residences on Long Island, New YorkCommunity Mental Health Journal, 1993
- The importance of neighbors: The social, cognitive, and affective components of neighboringAmerican Journal of Community Psychology, 1985
- What the neighbors think: Community attitudes toward local psychiatric facilitiesCommunity Mental Health Journal, 1984
- Scaling Community Attitudes Toward the Mentally IllSchizophrenia Bulletin, 1981
- Attitudes toward the mentally ill and reactions to mental health facilitiesSocial Science & Medicine. Part D: Medical Geography, 1979