Mental illness stigma as a moderator in the relationship between religiosity and help-seeking attitudes among Muslims from 16 Arab countries
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Date
2023Author
Fekih-Romdhane, FetenDaher-Nashif, Suhad
Stambouli, Manel
Alhuwailah, Amthal
Helmy, Mai
Shuwiekh, Hanaa Ahmed Mohamed
Mohamed Lemine, Cheikh Mohamed Fadel
Radwan, Eqbal
Saquib, Juliann
Saquib, Nazmus
Fawaz, Mirna
Zarrouq, Btissame
Naser, Abdallah Y.
Obeid, Sahar
Saleh, Maan
Haider, Sanad
Miloud, Lahmer
Badrasawi, Manal
Hamdan-Mansour, Ayman
Barbato, Mariapaola
Motwakil Bakhiet, Aisha
Khalil, Najat Sayem
Adawi, Samir
Grein, Fatheya
Loch, Alexandre Andrade
Cheour, Majda
Hallit, Souheil
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Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background
Determining the potential barriers responsible for delaying access to care, and elucidating pathways to early intervention should be a priority, especially in Arab countries where mental health resources are limited. To the best of our knowledge, no previous studies have examined the relationship between religiosity, stigma and help-seeking in an Arab Muslim cultural background. Hence, we propose in the present study to test the moderating role of stigma toward mental illness in the relationship between religiosity and help-seeking attitudes among Muslim community people living in different Arab countries.
Method
The current survey is part of a large-scale multinational collaborative project (StIgma of Mental Problems in Arab CounTries [The IMPACT Project]). We carried-out a web-based cross-sectional, and multi-country study between June and November 2021. The final sample comprised 9782 Arab Muslim participants (mean age 29.67 ± 10.80 years, 77.1% females).
Results
Bivariate analyses showed that less stigmatizing attitudes toward mental illness and higher religiosity levels were significantly associated with more favorable help-seeking attitudes. Moderation analyses revealed that the interaction religiosity by mental illness stigma was significantly associated with help-seeking attitudes (Beta = .005; p < .001); at low and moderate levels of stigma, higher religiosity was significantly associated with more favorable help-seeking attitudes.
Conclusion
Our findings preliminarily suggest that mental illness stigma is a modifiable individual factor that seems to strengthen the direct positive effect of religiosity on help-seeking attitudes. This provides potential insights on possible anti-stigma interventions that might help overcome reluctance to counseling in highly religious Arab Muslim communities.
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- Medicine Research [1485 items ]