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Stigma of mental illness,religious change,and explanatory models of mental illness among Jewish patients at a mental-health clinic in North Jerusalem
Authors:Daniel D Rosen  David Greenberg  James Schmeidler  Gaby Shefler
Institution:1. Mount Sinai Services , New York, USA;2. New York University School of Medicine , New York, USA drosen@YKVK.com;4. Mental Health Center, Herzog Hospital , Jerusalem, Israel;5. Hadassah School of Medicine, Hebrew University , Jerusalem, Israel;6. Mount Sinai School of Medicine , New York, USA;7. Hebrew University , Jerusalem, Israel
Abstract:During 3 months in 2004, 38 recent referrals to a Community Mental Health Clinic in North Jerusalem, a substantially Ultra-Orthodox Jewish neighborhood, were evaluated by the Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue. This questionnaire, which includes a 13-item scale measuring stigma towards mental illness, was adapted and translated into Hebrew. Patients with a more religious upbringing expressed a greater sense of stigma towards mental illness; however, patients who now had a more religious affiliation did not. The 14 patients who had experienced a religious change toward a more religious affiliation reported a lower level of stigma than the 24 non-returnees. Even when controlling for religious upbringing, the partial correlation between stigma score and religious change was significant. Stigma was lower among younger but not older returnees. Findings from this study support the hypothesis that a stigma of mental illness may be a deterrent to the use of a public mental-health clinic for religious Jews in Israel. Ultra-Orthodox Jewish patients (especially non-Hasidic) used a nonreligious explanatory model (perception and understanding) of mental illness more often than a religious explanatory model. This last finding could reflect a shift in the Ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities from a religious to a more medical and psychological explanatory model.
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