Among all participants, 95.1% had a positive attitude towards psychiatry, while only 4.8% had a negative attitude with an average ATP-30 score in our sample of 111.95 over 150 (SD = 12.55). In addition, 26.5% of participants reported that they consider psychiatry as a potential career choice. None of the demographic factors influenced the ATP-30 scores. Exposure to a patient with a diagnosed psychiatric illness in the student’s surroundings and a lower WHO-5 well-being index were the only two significant factors that resulted in favorable attitudes towards psychiatry in the multivariate analysis.
Favorable ATP-30 Score in Lebanese Medical Students
When handing out such types of questionnaires in a developing Arab country, one would expect to have rather unfavorable attitudes towards psychiatry [3,4,5]. Surprisingly, and according to this study, medical students in Lebanon do not fall into the traditional “developed vs developing countries” paradigm. The ATP-30 average score of Lebanese medical students, which is 111.95, did indeed surpass that of medical students in India (93.31), Egypt (99.31), Nigeria (103.6), Bahrain (105.79), and Hungary (106.4) [5, 10,11,12,13]. It is in the range of that of Germany (111.6), Austria (112.2), and Switzerland (111.9) [13].
Factors Related to a Favorable ATP-30 Score
Demographics
Demographic variables in this sample did not significantly impact the ATP-30 score, as shown in similar studies in other countries such as Serbia [14]. In contrast, another study found that more students from private universities report psychiatry as a potential career choice than students from public universities, which was not found in our Lebanese sample [15].
Also, it is noteworthy that, in the general Lebanese population, higher knowledge of mental illness was reported in the North of Lebanon, which was not the case in our medical students’ sample [3].
Religiosity
The question of religiosity was raised in this study, especially since historical tension between religion and psychiatry did not subside yet, with US psychiatrists being overall less religious than other physicians [16]. Many Arab citizens stigmatize mental health conditions and consider that patients who struggle with psychiatric illnesses can be cured if brought closer to God, explaining the role attributed to religious healers in these countries [17]. Nonetheless, evidence has found that religiosity is not a protective factor against depression in a sample of Lebanese breast cancer patients [18]. As expected, after examining the data presented above, non-religious medical students did not have significantly higher ATP-30 scores than religious students (Table 1).
Being Acquainted with a Psychiatric Patient
Being acquainted with a psychiatric patient is one of the two significant factors to more favorable ATP-30 scores identified in this study. This sensitization role was identified in other publications through attending a psychiatry/mental health club during medical school years, for instance [19,20,21]. This finding emphasizes the importance of continuous close contact with patients struggling with mental disorders, which gives medical students an insight into these patients’ daily lives, possibly portraying the importance of good patient management and highlighting the role of the psychiatrist in society.
ATP-30 and WHO-5
Two scales were used in this questionnaire: the ATP-30 and the WHO-5. Interestingly, medical students who scored less on the WHO-5 scale, meaning that they had poorer psychological well-being at the time of the questionnaire, scored higher on the ATP-30 reflecting a more favorable opinion about psychiatry, psychiatrists, psychiatric hospitals, and psychiatric treatments at hand. In reality, physicians are not immune to stress, depression, anxiety, substance misuse, and other psychiatric conditions, but many studies suggest that psychiatrists are particularly more prone to depression and burnout [22, 23].
Psychiatry as a Career Choice
In this study, 26.5% of participants reported that they consider psychiatry as a potential career choice. A 2013 systemic review included 12,144 students from 74 medical schools in 22 different countries; psychiatry as a career choice was not very popular or appealing among these students overall [24]. This point is of particular interest, knowing that the shortage of psychiatrists has been an emerging concern in many countries such as the USA, where quantitative data estimated that the deficit in psychiatrists might hit alarming numbers of 14,280 to 31,091 psychiatrists in the USA in 2024 [25]. Third-world countries such as Lebanon are particularly more at risk, given that in many developing countries there is a continuing “brain-drain,” defined as the emigration of psychiatrists from developing to developed countries such as Canada, Australia, and the USA [26]. Numbers show that 40% of physicians—including psychiatrists—graduated from Lebanese medical schools from 1978 to 2004 are currently active physicians in the USA [27]. Thus, even though in our sample 8.7% strongly agreed to the statement “I would like to be a psychiatrist” and another 19.9% also agreed to this statement (Table 2), there is no guarantee that these individuals will be supplying the Lebanese psychiatrists’ workforce.
Individual Questions from the ATP-30
This Lebanese sample’s positive attitudes towards psychiatry are also manifested in the answers to several questions in the ATP-30 scale. For instance, only 1.8% strongly agreed that psychiatry has very little scientific information to go on, pointing out a possible non-scientific, philosophical basis for psychiatry. This particular issue has been addressed multiple times in similar studies and was found to be a negative factor discouraging students from pursuing psychiatry [28, 29]. In another study, it even resulted along with other factors to psychiatry being ranked as the least attractive specialty [30]. One might be doubtful about psychiatric diagnoses because these are usually not based on physical findings, laboratory results, and imaging. Currently, the DSM-5 (The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition) manual is used in Lebanon to diagnose mental disorders. Even this categorical system was criticized several times, as in the paper by Allsopp et al. published in 2019, reporting heterogeneity in diagnosis classification [31]. Some of the points discussed in this paper were the overlap between criteria of diagnoses, as several symptoms were found in many diagnoses, and the absent role of trauma in the diagnosis of most psychiatric conditions, while trauma seems to have a leading role in their pathogenesis [32].
When asked if psychiatric patients are more interesting to work with than other patients, 17% strongly agreed and 2.1% strongly disagreed. Accordingly, other studies have also found that working with psychiatric patients is often considered by medical students as an intellectual challenge [29, 33], especially in multicultural contexts, where treatment guidelines may not be optimally applicable or evidence-based [34] and where proactive, creative thinking is required. Lebanon is a fundamental model of ethnic and religious diversity with the coexistence of 18 religious sects within its 10,452 km2.
The most controversial statement in this questionnaire was probably the one that tackled whether the psychiatry course would be the most important part of medical schools’ curriculum. To this statement, 6.9% strongly disagreed, 26.2 % disagreed, 32% were neutral, 27.5% agreed, and 7.4% strongly agreed. To illustrate the cardinal role of psychiatry in medicine, Kallivayalil cited Socrates: “It is impossible for the part to be well, if the whole is not well” [35]. Practically, there is an incontestable reform in medicine from paternalism to a patient-centered practice. Psychiatrists have the leading role in this reform given that they have both a general medicine background and training in behavioral healthcare; they have been described as “catalysts” of this reform by Raney [36]. In Lebanon, the psychiatry curriculum might be limited due to time constraints. Therefore, increasing mental health education in medical schools’ curricula has been recommended to improve mental health services in Lebanon [6]. The gaps in a psychiatry curriculum would appear later on when primary care physicians would be unable to identify a psychiatric problem in patients with psychosomatic complaints, which is also a problem reported in Lebanon [6]. In an effort to evaluate the psychiatry curriculum at the Lebanese University, which is the only public sector university in Lebanon, we compared the ATP-30 scores of third-year students to that of fifth-year students, knowing that the psychiatry course is a four credits course (40 h) given in the fourth year of medical school. No significant difference was noted but both years had favorable attitudes (Fig. 1).
This study has several limitations; it could have been affected by a selection bias leading to a non-representative sample since the questionnaire has been sent electronically to medical students. Interns (sixth- and seventh-year medical students) were more likely to be busy during clinical rotations than other medical students, especially since data collection was conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic, leading to a lower response rate in these medical years. The response rate from certain universities (e.g., AUB) was also low, which renders a generalization about these universities difficult. In addition, information bias could have taken place if students answered in a way that does not truly reflect their opinions, to convey an improved picture of reality. Finally, there could have been a recall bias when the participants were asked about any acquaintance with a psychiatric patient.
In summary, Lebanese medical students have a favorable attitude towards psychiatry, which can be exploited to produce a larger psychiatric workforce in Lebanon, despite the ongoing brain-drain from Lebanon to the USA and European countries. This study showed that exposure to a patient with psychiatric illness yielded a more favorable outlook. Thus, early exposure could be a strategy used by Lebanese medical schools to ensure more awareness and positive perspectives and perhaps more medical students selecting psychiatry as a career choice. The strategy should also include appropriate implementations of policies regarding residency programs and updating psychiatry curricula in Lebanese medical schools.