| Literature DB >> 30103643 |
Zac E Seidler1, Simon M Rice2, John S Ogrodniczuk3, John L Oliffe4, Haryana M Dhillon5.
Abstract
Tailoring psychological treatments to men's specific needs has been a topic of concern for decades given evidence that many men are reticent to seek professional health care. However, existing literature providing clinical recommendations for engaging men in psychological treatments is diffuse. The aim of this scoping review was to provide a comprehensive summary of recommendations for how to engage men in psychological treatment. Four electronic databases (MEDLINE, PubMed, CINAHL, PsycINFO) were searched for articles published between 2000 and 2017. Titles and abstracts were reviewed; data extracted and synthesized thematically. Of 3,627 citations identified, 46 met the inclusion criteria. Thirty articles (65%) were reviews or commentaries; 23 (50%) provided broad recommendations for working with all men. Findings indicate providing male-appropriate psychological treatment requires clinicians to consider the impact of masculine socialization on their client and themselves, and how gender norms may impact clinical engagement and outcomes. Existing literature also emphasized specific process micro-skills (e.g., self-disclosure, normalizing), language adaption (e.g., male-oriented metaphors) and treatment styles most engaging for men (e.g., collaborative, transparent, action-oriented, goal-focused). Presented are clinical recommendations for how to engage men in psychological treatments including paying attention to tapping the strengths of multiple masculinities coexisting within and across men. Our review suggests more empirically informed tailored interventions are needed, along with formal program evaluations to advance the evidence base.Entities:
Keywords: gender; help-seeking; masculinity; psychotherapy; review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30103643 PMCID: PMC6199457 DOI: 10.1177/1557988318792157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Mens Health ISSN: 1557-9883
Key Themes Based on Clinical Recommendations.
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| • When conceptualizing the client, consider the following: |
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| • Devise, set and check progress on specific goals and develop plan of action collaboratively to increase acceptance—2, 3, 8, 12, 15, 16, 20, 22, 29, 34, 39, 40, 44, |
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| To employ a strength-based relational style, consider the following: |
| • Ensure the therapeutic relationship is: egalitarian, emotionally supportive, reciprocal, collaborative and nondirective—2, 3, 11, 12, 20, 21, 24, 27, 29, 30, 34, 35, 36, 37, 39, 41, 42, 43, 44, | |
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| • Use male-oriented language that respects maleness—4, 8, 13, 14, 20, 24, 25, 28, 29, 30, 31, 33, 36, 40, 41, 43, 44. |
Note. Numerical items refer to articles listing each recommendation as numbered in Table 1.
Key Characteristics of Included Articles.
| # | Article | Design | Sample | Participant characteristics | Treatment styles | Treatment orientation | Theoretical constructs mentioned |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Commentary | – | NS | I & G | NS | Social learning; psychodynamic; social constructionist & feminist approaches to masculinity | |
| 2 | Empirical, quantitative | NS | I | NS | Masculine gender role | ||
| 3 | Empirical, qualitative (incl. case study) | African American male; depression | I | CBT; interpersonal | Multicultural, feminist and masculine role | ||
| 4 |
| Empirical, quantitative | NS | I | Integrative; humanistic | Traditional masculine roles | |
| 5 | Empirical, mixed methods | Male domestic abuse perpetrators | G | Psychoeducation | Stages of change model | ||
| 6 | Commentary | – | NS | I | Clinical assessment | Masculine gender role socialization; gender role conflict; traditional masculine values; multiple masculinities | |
| 7 | Commentary | – | Males with depression | I, G, C | Clinical assessment; CBT; psychodynamic; self-psychology | Masculine gender role socialization; gender role conflict | |
| 8 | Commentary | – | Male military veterans | NS | NS | Masculine gender role socialization; hypermasculine subculture; gender role conflict | |
| 9 | Commentary | – | Male military veterans | I | NS | Traditional masculinity; masculine gender role socialization; normative male alexithymia | |
| 10 | Empirical, quantitative (Delphi study) | Family therapists specializing in gender issues | F | NS | Traditional gender roles; masculine mystique; stereotypical gender relations; male socialization; multiple masculinities | ||
| 11 | Empirical, qualitative | Mixed gender with depression | I | NS | Gender stereotypes; socially constructed gender roles; gender role conflict; hegemonic masculinity; traditional gender role | ||
| 12 | Commentary | – | Males in couples counseling | C | NS | Traditional masculine roles; gender role socialization; gender role conflict; gender-specific stigma; multiple masculinities | |
| 13 | Commentary | – | Males with work–life balance difficulties | NS | Integrity model (existential/humanistic) | Traditional gender stereotypes | |
| 14 | Commentary | – | Males in college | I | NS | Masculine gender role socialization; traditional masculine norms; normative male alexithymia | |
| 15 |
| Commentary | – | NS | I | Person-centered | Traditional masculinity; hegemonic masculinity; normative male gender role; gender role conflict; multiple masculinities; stages of change |
| 16 | Commentary | – | NS | I | NS | Traditional masculine socialization; multiple masculinities; masculine gender role norms; masculinity-related problems | |
| 17 | Commentary | – | NS | I & G | NS | Masculine role norms; traditional masculine socialization | |
| 18 | Empirical, mixed methods | NS | I | NS | Traditional masculinity; masculine gender roles; gender normative behavior; gender role expectations; gender role conflict | ||
| 19 | Commentary | – | NS | I | Positive psychology | Traditional masculinity; positive masculinity; gender role conflict | |
| 20 | Empirical, mixed methods | Male military veterans | G | NS | Gender role socialization; gender role strain; traditional masculinity | ||
| 21 | Commentary | – | Older males | I & G | NS | Gender role conflict; masculine gender role socialization | |
| 22 | Commentary | – | Male domestic abuse perpetrators | G | CBT; Psychodynamic | Gender-based power differences; gender privilege; gender role norms; gender role resocialization | |
| 23 | Commentary | – | Male military veterans | NS | Psychoeducation; MI; emotion coaching; CBT | Traditional masculinity; masculine gender role socialization; gender role conflict | |
| 24 | Commentary | – | NS | I | NS | Traditional masculinity; gender role norms; gender role conflict | |
| 25 | Commentary | – | NS | I | NS | Masculine gender roles; gender role conflict | |
| 26 | Empirical, qualitative | Psychologists specializing in working with boys and men | NS | NS | Gender role socialization; traditional masculinity; masculine gender roles | ||
| 27 | Empirical, qualitative | NS | G | CBT | Gender role socialization | ||
| 28 | Commentary | – | NS | NS | NS | Multicultural; traditional male gender role; gender role conflict | |
| 29 | Commentary | – | Male domestic abuse perpetrators | NS | NS | Stages of change; multicultural | |
| 30 | Commentary | – | NS | G | Integrity model (existential/humanistic) | Multiple masculinities; positive masculinity; gender role re-evaluation | |
| 31 | Commentary | – | NS | I | Integrity model (existential/humanistic) | Gender role strain; positive masculinity | |
| 32 | Empirical, quantitative | Males with depression | G | CBT | Masculine gender role norms; gender role socialization | ||
| 33 | Commentary | – | Males with depression | NS | NS | Gender role norms; traditional masculinity | |
| 34 | Empirical, qualitative | Young males | I | NS | Traditional masculinity; gender role norms | ||
| 35 | Commentary | – | NS | NS | NS | Masculine gender roles; traditional masculinity; gender socialization | |
| 36 | Empirical, quantitative | NS | I | NS | Traditional masculinity; gender role norms; gender role conflict; multiple masculinities; masculine identity | ||
| 37 | Commentary | – | Males in high accountability professions (e.g., doctor/lawyer) | I & G | NS | Masculine gender role socialization; traditional masculinity | |
| 38 | Commentary | – | NS | G | Narrative therapy | Traditional masculinity; male sex roles | |
| 39 |
| Empirical, qualitative | Males with depression | I | NS | Dominant masculine ideals; multiple masculinities; masculine gender norms | |
| 40 |
| Empirical, qualitative | NS | G | CBT | Modern masculinity | |
| 41 | Review | – | Males with depression | I & G | CBT | Gender role socialization; traditional masculinity; gender role schema theory; gender role conflict; multiple masculinities | |
| 42 | Commentary | – | NS | G | NS | Multiple masculinities | |
| 43 | Empirical, quantitative | Males with internalizing symptoms | I | MI | Traditional masculinity | ||
| 44 | Commentary | – | NS | I & G | NS | Traditional masculinity; gender socialization | |
| 45 | Commentary | – | NS | NS | NS | Gender role socialization; gender role conflict; traditional masculinity; masculine gender role norms | |
| 46 | Commentary | – | Latino males | NS | NS | Latino masculine identity; traditional masculinity; gender role socialization |
Note. NS = nonspecified; I = individual; G = group; F = family; C = couples; CBT = cognitive behavioral therapy; MI = motivational interviewing.
Figure 1.PRISMA flow diagram.