| Literature DB >> 23031330 |
Caroline Farmer1, Paul Farrand, Heather O'Mahen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a significant treatment gap for patients with depression. A third of sufferers never seek help, and the vast majority of those who do only do so after considerable delay. Little is understood regarding poor help-seeking rates amongst people with depression, with existing research mainly focussed on the impact of barriers to treatment. The current study explored psychological factors affecting help-seeking behaviour in clinically depressed individuals.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23031330 PMCID: PMC3568063 DOI: 10.1186/1471-244X-12-164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Figure 1Participant recruitment.
Description of common themes
| DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS CREATE CONFLICT | Symptoms are identified as abnormal. Participants express fears that symptoms threaten their identity and important goals |
| AVOIDANCE | Participants cope with identity and goal conflict by avoiding their symptoms and using psychological strategies to reduce the perceived threat to goals. The avoidance of symptoms was the primary cause of help-seeking delay |
| ACCEPTANCE | Participants stop avoiding their symptoms and begin to make decisions about seeking help. Identity and goals begin to change to accommodate the experience of depression. |
Figure 2The progression of themes over time.
Factors influencing help-seeking decisions at the decisional balance stage
| Knowledge and attitudes to treatment | Beliefs about the appropriateness of treatment | 12 (60%) |
| Beliefs about the availability and accessibility of treatment | 9 (45%) | |
| Fears of an unhelpful or non-empathic response from doctor/medical professional | 6 (30%) | |
| Beliefs about the effectiveness of treatment | 5 (25%) | |
| Fears that seeking help/receiving treatment will be uncomfortable or distressing | 4 (20%) | |
| Depressive symptoms | Increased symptom severity influenced beliefs about the appropriateness of treatment, and increased the costs of not seeking help | 10 (50%) |
| General feelings of low self-worth and hopelessness | 6 (30%) | |
| Structural barriers | Time commitments | 3 (15%) |
| Finance | 2 (10%) | |
| Other | Expectations of social stigma | 9 (45%) |
| Stoic attitude-preference to manage symptoms alone | 4 (20%) | |
| Other costs/benefits, e.g. fears about outcome for medical record, to achieve important goals | 10 (50%) |