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Academic Clinical Psychiatry, University of Sheffield
University of Sheffield, Academic Clinical Psychiatry, Division of Genomic Medicine, The Longley Centre, Norwood Grange Drive, Sheffield S5 7JT, e-mail: s.a.spence{at}sheffield.ac.uk
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Abstract |
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Greetings cards (wishing patients well) appear less abundant on psychiatric wards than other inpatient facilities. We tested this hypothesis in three cross-sectional surveys of teaching hospitals in Sheffield.
RESULTS
On each occasion, psychiatric wards contained significantly fewer card
recipients (
2 test, P<0.001). Individual recipients in
psychiatric wards received significantly fewer cards than recipients in
general hospitals (Kruskal-Wallis test, P<0.05).
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Although receiving a card might seem a trivial matter, it nevertheless denotes the outcome of an altruistic act, which may be appreciated by its recipient. Psychiatric in-patients receive fewer such acts of kindness than other in-patients. These data concur with other recent reports suggesting that the stigma of mental illness extends to expressions of altruism.
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Introduction |
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Method |
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On each ward, we approached nursing staff to obtain their permission to count greetings cards. No patients were directly interviewed. Staff on most wards agreed to the count and the local research ethics committee approved the study under the category of audit (Dr S. Brennan, personal communication).
The same protocol was followed on each of the three weekends and the following data acquired: the number of beds on each ward, the number of beds at which there were cards and the total number of cards (at each bed).
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Results |
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When compared formally, there were significantly fewer card recipients on
the psychiatric wards on each occasion (
2 test, each
comparison significant at P<0.001, Table
1). Similarly, individual recipients on psychiatric wards
exhibited significantly fewer cards at each time point than those recipients
on general wards (Kruskal-Wallis test, each comparison significant at
P<0.05, Table 1).
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Discussion |
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Our findings appear reliable over time and benefit from internal replication. However, certain caveats remain. First, the data relate to Sheffield teaching hospitals and may not reflect conditions elsewhere (although they are consistent with the findings of Wiener et al, 1999; Bromley & Cunningham, 2004). Second, we have selected only three time points within 1 year. It is possible that we have missed aspects of seasonal variation. Third, card counts extending over weekends, i.e. 2 days, may have incurred errors in so far as they were not obtained on one occasion; hence, some patients may have been discharged or admitted while the count was ongoing. However, we think the latter would have militated against our hypothesis rather than promoting a type 1 error. Assuming that the rate of bed turnover is higher in the general hospital setting (true for most of the wards we examined), we should expect more cards to be removed by those leaving hospital on the general sites, and more patients to be admitted (without cards) over the weekends. Such movements would serve to minimise the effect we describe.
A fourth potential caveat arises from our counting only those cards that were visible on the wards; we did not take any account of those that might have been concealed, discarded or destroyed. Although the latter possibility might be posited to have greater face validity in the psychiatric setting, the number of missing cards required to nullify our findings would be considerable (approximately 300 on each occasion). If this were the case, i.e. if in-patients were hiding/discarding this many cards, then we might expect it to become apparent. Nevertheless, we cannot exclude this possibility on the basis of our current data.
Notwithstanding the above, we think that our findings really do reflect a phenomenon that is readily apparent on psychiatric wards: a notable absence of cards wishing patients well. In the following we offer some, admittedly speculative, hypotheses to account for this finding.
Isolation of psychiatric patients
Many psychiatric disorders impact upon social function, rendering
individuals withdrawn or isolated. Hence, it might be that they have fewer
potential correspondents than other in-patients; indeed, re-admissions and
prolonged admissions of psychiatric patients have been found to be associated
with such an absence of friends (de Falco,
1975; Salokangas et
al, 1990). However, when case-control studies have controlled
for size of social network they have still found that psychiatric in-patients
receive fewer cards and gifts (Wiener
et al,1999; Bromley
& Cunningham, 2004), suggesting that the problem is not
primarily one of network size.
Self-stigmatisation
It is possible that psychiatric in-patients do not tell others that they
are in hospital. Such self-stigmatisation is reported by service
users, who may be ashamed by their illness and may not wish to be seen when
ill. They may also fear loss of employment: Because people dont
understand, if they know that Ive been off work because of mental ill
health they may choose to use somebody else rather than me (a service
user interviewed by Dinos et al,
2004).
Therapeutic nihilism
It may be that where in-patients inform friends and family the latter
regard it as unlikely that their friend or relative will recover. Hence, the
absence of get well messages may reflect a tacit therapeutic
nihilism on the part of those known to patients.
Provocative message
In the case of psychiatric disorder, messages such as get well
soon or the like are perhaps more contentious than in most other
medical settings. These words imply a recognition that the recipient is
ill, something which many patients may not accept (particularly
those who are formally detained). It might be provocative to send a get
well soon message (though neither this, nor the therapeutic nihilism
hypothesis, would preclude the sending of other, well-meaning messages).
There may be other possible explanations for the findings we describe. Nevertheless, the latter clearly imply that even such a simple social transaction as the giving and receiving of a greetings card exposes the discontinuity between the world of the general hospital patient and that of the psychiatric in-patient. Every card denotes a sequence of actions: card selection; the message written with a purpose (generally altruistic), directed towards the person who is unwell; the sending or delivering of that card. The notion that such actions occur less often within the social milieu of psychiatric in-patients might appear trivial but it provides an index of the way our patients are treated by others. It suggests that despite a contemporary emphasis upon care in the community, integration, and the reduction of stigma (Crisp et al, 2004), following their admission to hospital, psychiatric in-patients are indeed treated differently to others; and this treatment implicates those who are closest to them.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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CRISP, A. H., COWAN, L. & HART, D. (2004) The
Colleges Anti-Stigma Campaign,1998-2003: A shortened version of the
concluding report. Psychiatric Bulletin,
28, 133
-136.
DE FALCO, M. L. (1975) The rehospitalization of discharged schizophrenic patients. Perspectives in Psychiatric Care, 13, 130 -135.[Medline]
DINOS, S., STEVENS, S., SERFATY, M., et al
(2004) Stigma: the feelings and experiences of 46 people with
mental illness: qualitative study. British Journal of
Psychiatry, 184, 176
-181.
SALOKANGAS, R. K., LOIKKANEN, T. & SANTALA, H. (1990) The patients of a special psychogeriatric ward: psychosocial situation, clinical disorder and results of treatment. Psychiatria Fennica, 21, 175 -188.
WIENER, A., WESSELY, S. & LEWIS, G. (1999) You dont give me flowers anymore: an analysis of gift-giving to medical and psychiatric inpatients. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 34, 136 -140.[Medline]
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