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Gender, Race-Ethnicity, and Psychosocial Barriers to Mental Health Care: An Examination of Perceptions and Attitudes among Adults Reporting Unmet Need
180
Citations
40
References
2008
Year
EthnicityFamily MedicineStigmatizationHealth Care DisparityHealth DisparitiesSocial Determinants Of HealthMental HealthRacial DisparitiesMental Health CareStigma AvoidancePublic HealthMinority StressVulnerable Patient PopulationSocial StigmaPsychiatryMental Health StigmaNursingCommunity Mental HealthPsychosocial BarriersAdult Mental HealthMedicineHealth Disparity
Though researchers have described psychosocial barriers to mental health care-seeking, limited research has examined ways in which gender and race-ethnicity are associated with individuals' perceptions and attitudes. This study investigates correlates of psychosocial barriers to mental health care in a population of adults reporting unmet need for mental health care, focusing on gender and race-ethnicity. Data are from the 2002 National Survey on Drug Use and Health. Multivariate analyses show that non-Latino white male status is positively associated with stigma avoidance and mistrust/fear of the mental health care system. Persons of lower income or educational status are less likely to report negative attitudes towards care. Findings imply a need to reconsider the roles of gender race-ethnicity, and socioeconomic status within investigations of psychosocial barriers to care. Future research should examine the relationships among social status, help-seeking behaviors, and attitudes toward mental health care.
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