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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
AIMS AND METHOD
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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