Estimating the effect of anticipated depression treatment-related stigma on depression remission among people with noncommunicable diseases and depressive symptoms in Malawi.

dc.contributor.author

Dussault, Josée M

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Zimba, Chifundo

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Akello, Harriet

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Stockton, Melissa

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Hill, Sherika

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Aiello, Allison E

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Keil, Alexander

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Gaynes, Bradley N

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Udedi, Michael

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Pence, Brian W

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Delanerolle, Gayathri

dc.date.accessioned

2023-11-03T22:11:01Z

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2023-11-03T22:11:01Z

dc.date.issued

2023-01

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2023-11-03T22:10:59Z

dc.description.abstract

Purpose

While mental health stigma research is sparse in Malawi, research in other settings suggests that stigma represents a barrier to mental health treatment and recovery. Accordingly, we conducted an analysis to understand the role of treatment-related stigma in depression care in Malawi by estimating the effect of patients' baseline anticipated treatment-related stigma on their 3-month probability of depression remission when newly identified with depression.

Methods

We conducted depression screening and treatment at 10 noncommunicable disease (NCD) clinics across Malawi from April 2019 through December 2021. Eligible cohort participants were 18-65 years with depressive symptoms indicated by a PHQ-9 score ≥5. Questionnaires at the baseline and 3-month interviews included a vignette-based quantitative stigma instrument that measured treatment-related stigma, i.e., concerns about external stigma because of receiving depression treatment. Using inverse probability weighting to adjust for confounding and multiple imputation to account for missing data, this analysis relates participants' baseline levels of anticipated treatment stigma to the 3-month probability of achieving depression remission (i.e., PHQ-9 score < 5).

Results

Of 743 included participants, 273 (37%) achieved depression remission by their 3-month interview. The probability of achieving depression remission at the 3-month interview among participants with high anticipated treatment stigma (0.31; 95% Confidence Interval [CI]: 0.23, 0.39)) was 10 percentage points lower than among the low/neutral stigma group (risk: 0.41; 95% CI: 0.36, 0.45; RD: -0.10; 95% CI: -0.19, -0.003).

Conclusion

In Malawi, a reduction in anticipated depression treatment-related stigma among NCD patients initiating depression treatment could improve depression outcomes. Further investigation is necessary to understand the modes by which stigma can be successfully reduced to improve mental health outcomes and quality of life among people living with depression.
dc.identifier

PONE-D-22-27546

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1932-6203

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1932-6203

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/29338

dc.language

eng

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Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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PloS one

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10.1371/journal.pone.0282016

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Humans

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Depression

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Quality of Life

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Malawi

dc.subject

Social Stigma

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Noncommunicable Diseases

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Estimating the effect of anticipated depression treatment-related stigma on depression remission among people with noncommunicable diseases and depressive symptoms in Malawi.

dc.type

Journal article

pubs.begin-page

e0282016

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3

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences

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Psychiatry, Child & Family Mental Health & Community Psychiatry

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

18

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