The cinemeducation seminars
As described elsewhere in detail [2], selection of movies for the seminars does not require that they are focused on mentally ill characters, but rather that they allow a reflection on helping relationships and on the approach to sufferance.
The current cinemeducation project involved both psychiatry residents and medical students, lasted 6 months, and included 12 meetings to reflect on the doctor-patient relationship and the importance of prejudice in psychiatry. Meetings took place approximately every fortnight, from 7 p.m. to 10–11 p.m. The movies were discussed from a psychological perspective in a group setting allowing brainstorming and sharing processes.
The research project was approved by the Institutional Review Board of the Università del Piemonte Orientale as a part of the research duties of the Counselling Service of the University.
Assessment
Data were collected anonymously via self-report questionnaires from 40 randomly selected participants. Assessment scales were administered both before (baseline, T0) and after the end of the workshop (T1, after 6 months since baseline).
Attitudes Towards Psychiatry-Scale (ATP-30) [3]
The validated 30-item, Likert-type scale is designed to measure medical students’ attitudes to psychiatry. Higher scores indicate a more positive attitude.
Social Distance Scale (SDS) [4]
The SDS comprises seven questions that refer to interaction with the target individual, each rated by the subject on a 4-point Likert scale. Higher scores indicate a tendency to maintain a greater social distance from people diagnosed with a mental illness.
Interpersonal Reactivity Index (IRI) [5]
Multidimensional scale composed of 28 self-report items, which assess four dimensions of dispositional empathy: Perspective Taking, Fantasy, Empathic Concern, and Personal Distress. Perspective Taking assesses the tendency to spontaneously adopt the psychological point of view of others; Fantasy measures the tendency to imaginatively transpose oneself into the feelings and actions of fictitious characters in books, movies, and plays. The Empathic Concern subscale measures other-oriented feelings of sympathy and concern for others in distress. The Personal Distress subscale assesses self-oriented anxiety when experiencing others in distress.
Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS) [6]
The TAS-20 consists of three subscales. Factor 1 (F1) assesses the difficulty of identifying feelings; Factor 2 (F2) assesses the difficulty of describing feelings; Factor 3 (F3) assesses externally oriented thinking. The total score ranges from 20 to 100 points, and scores of 61 and above suggest an alexithymic state.
Statistical analysis
Data analysis was performed with the Statistical Package for Social Sciences version 20. The T test was used to compare the questionnaires mean scores at T0 and T1.