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Journal Article

Citation

Moreland JJ, Coxe KA, Yang J. J. Sport Health Sci. 2018; 7(1): 58-69.

Affiliation

Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Shanghai University of Sport, Publisher Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jshs.2017.04.009

PMID

30356496

PMCID

PMC6180550

Abstract

BACKGROUND: While mental health among collegiate athletes is receiving increased attention, research on factors surrounding collegiate athletes' decision to seek mental health services is limited. The goal of the present review was to analyze and synthesize the current literature concerning collegiate athletes' utilization of mental health services, including the facilitators of and barriers to use of these services.

METHODS: The analysis was guided and organized using a socio-ecological framework, which considered the unique context in which collegiate athletes study and perform. A total of 21 articles, published between 2005 and 2016, which concern U.S. collegiate athletes' mental health services utilization (MHSU) were selected and included for the final analysis. Conceptualizations and operationalizations of MHSU were compared and contrasted. Facilitators of and barriers to athletes MHSU were examined and summarized while appropriately considering the proximity of each factor (facilitator or barrier) to the athletes.

RESULTS: Results showed variations in conceptualizations and operationalizations of MHSU in the articles analyzed, which made interpretation and cross comparison difficult. Collegiate athletes are willing to utilize mental health services, but gender, perceived stigma, peer norms-for athletes and coaches-plus service availability impact their MHSU.

CONCLUSION: Key stakeholders, administrators, and public health officials should partner to eliminate MHSU barriers, support facilitators, and generally empower collegiate athletes to actively manage their mental health.


Language: en

Keywords

College athlete; Mental health; Mental health services; NCAA; Psychology; Sport psychology; Systematic review

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