| Literature DB >> 26185741 |
Crystal Dea Moore1, Casey Schofield2, Dalena R M van Rooyen3, Lena M C Andersson4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Globally, the prevalence of mental illness is on the rise, although few people with psychiatric disorders actually seek mental health care. One under-researched factor that may impact help-seeking behavior from health care professionals is self-efficacy. This research presents the development and validation of the Self-Efficacy to Seek Mental Health Care (SE-SMHC) scale, a nine item-self report measure. It was hypothesized that self-efficacy for seeking mental health care would be positively associated with higher rates of self-reported help-seeking behavior and higher rates of advising others in distress to access mental health treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Help seeking; Mental health; Self-efficacy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26185741 PMCID: PMC4497998 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-015-1109-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Factor loadings, descriptive statistics, and instructions for administering and scoring the SE-SMHC
| Item | Communalities | Factor 1 loadings | Factor 2 loadings | Item mean | Item standard deviation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Find a place to get mental health treatment | 0.59 | 0.70 | 7.31 | 3.05 | |
| 2. Get transportation to a mental health care service | 0.64 | 0.83 | 7.37 | 3.06 | |
| 3. Clearly tell the staff what is troubling me | 0.71 | 0.88 | 7.84 | 2.62 | |
| 4. Understand the information given to me by the staff | 0.74 | 0.88 | 8.08 | 2.36 | |
| 5. Be able to follow the treatment recommendations made by the staff | 0.68 | 0.69 | 8.25 | 2.24 | |
| 6. Cope well with the consequences of seeking care (for example, treatments, tests, hospitalizations) | 0.69 | −0.74 | 7.43 | 2.69 | |
| 7. Cope well with my family and friends reactions to me seeking mental health treatment | 0.75 | −0.85 | 7.28 | 2.78 | |
| 8. Cope well with the attitudes that the staff may have towards me | 0.69 | −0.86 | 6.73 | 2.98 | |
| 9. Overcome any embarrassment I may have about seeking mental health treatment | 0.76 | −0.88 | 7.03 | 2.94 |
Factor loadings <0.20 are not reported. To administer the scale, the nine items should be preceded by these instructions: Below are several statements about your confidence in your ability to seek mental health care if you ever needed it. For each statement, rate how confident you are from 1 = no confidence to 10 = complete confidence in your ability to do each behavior. There are no right or wrong answers. We are interested in how you see yourself and your own abilities. To score the subscales, add up the ratings for SE-KNOW subscale (SE-KNOW scores will range from 5 to 50) and SE-COPE subscale separately (SE-COPE scores will range from 4 to 40). For the total scale score, add up the ratings for all 9 items (SE-TOTAL scores will range from 9 to 90).
Characteristics of the 977 participants (52% men, 48% women)
| N | % | |
|---|---|---|
| Place or residence | ||
| Port Elizabeth urban/semi urban area | 832 | 85 |
| Kirkwood: rural area | 145 | 15 |
| Age | ||
| 30–40 | 346 | 35 |
| 18–29 | 631 | 65 |
| Ethnicity | ||
| Black | 821 | 84 |
| Colored | 86 | 9 |
| White | 59 | 6 |
| Asian | 9 | 0.9 |
| Don’t want to respond | 2 | 0.2 |
| Marital status | ||
| Married/cohabiting | 158 | 16 |
| Single, not in a relationship, widowed | 819 | 84 |
| Highest education | ||
| Completed tertiary education | 99 | 10 |
| Completed high school | 479 | 49 |
| Completed primary school + uncompleted | 399 | 41 |
| Employment status | ||
| Employed, full, part-time, self-employed | 307 | 31 |
| Unemployed and casual work | 670 | 69 |
| Weekly household income | ||
| 1001: >4,000 RAND | 219 | 23 |
| None: 1,000 RAND | 588 | 60 |
| Don’t want to disclose | 170 | 17 |