Religious Wear (Uniforms) in Psychiatry

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DOI: 10.4236/ojpsych.2014.42015    4,761 Downloads   6,848 Views  Citations
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ABSTRACT

Uniforms represent more than just a body cover. There could be symbols of status, power, authority, values, beliefs, identity, wealth representation, self-protection, health and safety, suppression of individuality and identification on one hand by the wearer. The observers may perceive uniforms differently based on their experiences, expectations, education, perceptual ability, conformity, status, power, self-confidence, and need for trust and communication without barrier or judgment. Forty five adult mentally ill patients (21 female and 24 male) were administered questionnaires with Linkert Scale regarding how approachable or off-putting they find casual and religious wear in social worker. Significantly more patients preferred casual wear to religious. Chi squared test equals 28.689 with p value of less than 0.0001 for four degrees of freedom.

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Bright, H. (2014) Religious Wear (Uniforms) in Psychiatry. Open Journal of Psychiatry, 4, 104-112. doi: 10.4236/ojpsych.2014.42015.

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