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Journal Article

Citation

Disabato DJ, Short JL, Lameira DM, Bagley KD, Wong SJ. J. Am. Coll. Health 2018; 66(8): 731-738.

Affiliation

VA Palo Alto Healthcare System.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/07448481.2018.1440568

PMID

29447625

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This study sought to replicate and extend research on social facilitators of college student's help seeking for psychological problems. PARTICIPANTS: We collected data on 420 ethnically diverse college students at a large public university (September 2008 - May 2010).

METHODS: Students completed a cross-sectional online survey.

RESULTS: We found that students who were aware of close others' (e.g., family, friends) help seeking were two times more likely to have sought formal (e.g., psychologist) and informal (e.g., clergy) help themselves. Tests of moderation revealed the incremental effect (i.e., controlling for help seeking attitudes, internalizing symptoms, cultural demographics) of close others' formal help seeking was strong and significant for men (R RESULTS: =.112) while negligible and nonsignificant for women (R RESULTS: =.002).

CONCLUSIONS: We discuss the importance for students - particularly men - to learn about close others' help seeking for facilitating their own help seeking during times of distress.


Language: en

Keywords

help seeking; men & masculinity; mental health literacy; psychological symptoms

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