Psychosis and help‐seeking behaviour–A systematic review of the literature

Author:

Skrobinska Laura1ORCID,Newman‐Taylor Katherine12ORCID,Carnelley Katherine1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Psychology Department University of Southampton Southampton UK

2. Psychology Department Southern Health NHS Foundation Trust Southampton UK

Abstract

AbstractPurposeMany people with psychosis do not seek help which delays access to recommended treatments. Duration of untreated psychosis is associated with poor healthcare outcomes and increased risk of relapse. The reasons why people delay accessing treatment remain unclear. This is the first systematic review to synthesise the literature examining professional and non‐professional help‐seeking in psychosis across clinical and subclinical populations.MethodsWe searched four databases (APA PsycINFO, APA PsycArticles, Medline and British Library EThOS) to generate a comprehensive account of the quantitative literature. Heterogeneity of measures precluded a meta‐analysis.ResultsWe identified 19 articles (including 9686 participants) that met criteria for the review. Help‐seeking in psychosis is associated with being female, having a higher level of education, and experiencing more than one symptom. People with psychosis report stigma, poor mental health literacy and lack of family support as key barriers. Clinicians report childhood physical abuse, insecure attachment and severity of psychosis as additional barriers. We also found differences in preferred sources of help across cultures. There is currently no consensus on reliable help‐seeking measures.ConclusionsThis is the first systematic review to examine help‐seeking behaviour in psychosis. Assertive and culturally sensitive engagement efforts should be targeted towards people with a history of early adversity, poor mental health literacy, limited social support and more severe psychosis.

Publisher

Wiley

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