Role of Stigma and Attitudes Toward Help-Seeking from a General Practitioner for Mental Health Problems in a Rural Town

Author:

Wrigley Sarah1,Jackson Henry2,Judd Fiona3,Komiti Angela3

Affiliation:

1. North Western Aged Person's Mental Health Program, Sunshine Hospital, Melbourne, Australia

2. Department of Psychology, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia

3. Centre for Rural Mental Health, Monash University School of Psychiatry, Psychology and Psychological Medicine, and Bendigo Health Care Group, Bendigo, Australia

Abstract

Objective: To examine the role of perceived stigma and attitudes to seeking care in predicting help-seeking from a general practitioner (GP) for mental health problems. Method: Across-sectional surveyin 2002 with self-repor t questionnaires assessing current levels of symptomatology, disability, attitudes towards mental illness, knowledge of prevalence and causes of mental illness, contact with mental illness and help-seeking behaviour and preferences and attitudes toward seeking professional psychological help. Results: No significant relationship was found between symptom measures and measures of disability and help-seeking. Variables positively associated with general attitudes to seeking professional psychological help were: lower perceived stigma, and biological rather than person-based causal attributions for schizophrenia. Willingness to discuss mental health issues with a GP was predicted by the perceived helpfulness of the GP and by no other variable. Conclusions: Causal attributions and perceivedstigma rather than participants' levels of symptomatology and disability influence attitudes to help-seeking for mental health issues. Efforts to improve attitudes to help-seeking should focus on reducing stigma and improving mental health literacy regarding the causes of disorders.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,General Medicine

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