Author:
CHRISTIANA J. M.,GILMAN S. E.,GUARDINO M.,MICKELSON K.,MORSELLI P. L.,OLFSON M.,KESSLER R. C.
Abstract
Background. Self-report data obtained from members of advocate groups for patients with anxiety
or mood disorders in 11 countries were used to study time to initial professional help-seeking after
incident episodes.Method. Data were taken from 3516 self-administered questionnaires completed by members of
GAMIAN, an international consortium of mental health patient advocate groups. Reports about
age at onset and age at first seeking treatment were obtained retrospectively.Results. Approximately 40% of respondents reported that they sought treatment in the same year
as the first onset of their disorder. The median delay in help-seeking was 8 years for the remainder
of respondents. Synthetic cohort analysis suggests that delays have decreased in recent cohorts.
However, time to initial help-seeking in all cohorts and all countries was found to be inversely
related to age at onset.Conclusions. Although caution is needed in generalizing the results beyond members of patient
advocate groups, the key patterns found here were also found in previous analyses of general
population surveys carried out in the US and Canada. The critical and consistent finding in all these
studies is that presumably curable adolescents with early-onset disorders are, in effect, ignored by
the treatment system in these countries. Aggressive outreach and intervention among early-onset
cases might prove to be a cost-effective approach both to prevent the onset of secondary disorders
and to improve success in treating primary disorders.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
125 articles.
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