| Literature DB >> 32816062 |
Andrea B Martinez1,2, Melissa Co3, Jennifer Lau4, June S L Brown4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: This systematic review aims to synthesise the evidence on behavioural and attitudinal patterns as well as barriers and enablers in Filipino formal help-seeking.Entities:
Keywords: Barriers and facilitators; Filipinos; Help-seeking; Mental health; Mental health service use; Philippines
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32816062 PMCID: PMC7578164 DOI: 10.1007/s00127-020-01937-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol ISSN: 0933-7954 Impact factor: 4.328
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Study and participant characteristics
| Study | Participant characteristics | Location | Setting | Methodology | Questionnaire used on help-seeking | Quality assessment score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abe-Kim et al. (2007) [ Supplementary paper: Nguyen and Lee (2010) | 508 Filipino Americans in multi-ethnic study, with 53.74% ( | US | Community-based | Quantitative Cross-sectional study design (derived from National Latino and Asian American Study, 2002–2003) | Study-specific questionnaire on help-seeking sources, need for services, treatment satisfaction | Strong* |
| Bernardo and Estrellado (2017) [ | 70 Filipino women, with mean age of 39.13 (SD 9.175) | Philippines | Center-based women shelters | Quantitative Cross-sectional study design | Help-seeking intention scale Locus of hope scale | Moderate* |
| Cabbigat and Kangas (2017) | 117 Filipinos with 80.34% ( | Philippines | Local government, social welfare agencies and non-government organizations | Quantitative Cohort analytic study design | Study-specific questionnaire on help-seeking behavior Help-seeking preferences Attitudes Towards Services for Children and Adolescents (parent-report section of the child and adolescent services assessment) | Moderate* |
| David (2010) [ | 118 Filipino Americans with 47.46% ( | US | Community-based | Quantitative Cross-sectional study design | Inventory of attitudes toward seeking mental health services Cultural mistrust inventory Loss of Face Questionnaire Asian value scale | Moderate* |
Gong et al. (2003) [ Supplementary papers: Abe-Kim et al., (2004) [ | 2285 Filipino Americans, with 50.60% ( | US | Community-based | Quantitative Cross-sectional study design (derived from Filipino American Epidemiological Study, 1995–1999) | Study-specific questionnaire on help-seeking based on Kleinman (1978) typology of help-seeking sources: lay system, professional care system and folk system Research-designed questionnaire on loss of face | Moderate* |
| Green and Ayalon (2016) [ | 85 Filipino migrant home care workers with 86% ( | Israel | Community-based | Quantitative Cross-sectional study design | Study-specific questionnaire on social support, formal and informal report of abuse | Strong* |
Hechanova et al. (2013) [ Supplementary paper: Hechanova et al. (2011) | 365 overseas Filipino workers with 52.88% ( | Philippines with overseas Filipino participants mostly in Middle East | Employment agencies and university-based counseling centers | Mixed methods using surveys, interviews and chat conversations | Semi-structured open-ended questionnaire Intention to seek counseling inventory (adapted version) | Weak*/ Fair** |
| Hermannsdottir and Aegisdottir (2016) | 209 Filipino immigrants with 67% ( | Iceland | Community-based | Quantitative Cross-sectional study design | Psychological help-seeking attitudes and intentions Beliefs about psychological services scale Study-specific questionnaire on system barriers | Moderate* |
| Ho et al. (2018) [ | 175 Filipino participants for survey and focus group discussion with 45.71% ( | Multi-country study in Fiji, Cambodia and the Philippines | Community-based | Mixed methods using surveys and focus group discussions | Attitudes and understanding towards mental disorder Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help—Short Form and semi-structured guide for interview and focus group discussion Semi-structured interview guide for focus group discussion | Moderate */Good** |
Nguyen (2011) [ Supplementary paper: Nguyen (2012) | 269 Filipino Americans in multi-ethnic study, with 57.25% ( | US | Community-based | Quantitative Cross-sectional study design (derived from California Health Interview Survey, 2001) | Study-specific questionnaire | Strong* |
| Shoultz et al. (2010) [ | 10 Filipino American women with age range from 34 to 52 years old | US | Women’s support agency | Mixed methods using surveys, individual interviews and focus group discussions | Semi-structured interview guide on help-seeking behavior Perceptions of the Acceptability of violence | Weak* / Good** |
Straiton et al. (2018) [ Supplementary paper: Straiton et al. (2017) [ | 14 Filipino women with mean age of 33.7 | Norway | Community-based | Qualitative using in-depth interviews | Semi-structured interview guide with open-ended questions | Good** |
Thompson et al. (2002a) [ Supplement papers: Kelaher et al. (2000), Thompson et al. (2002b) [ | 487 Filipino women participated with mean age of 41.034 (SD 11.19) | Australia | Community-based | Mixed methods using multiple follow-up surveys, in-depth interviews and focus group discussions (derived from Filipina cohort of Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health, 1996) | Semi-structured interview guide General Health Questionnaire | Strong*/Good** |
Tuliao et al. (2016) [ Supplementary paper: Tuliao and Velasquez (2017) | 359 Filipino university students with 52.09% ( | Philippines | University-based | Quantitative Cross-sectional study design | Perceived likelihood of seeking help (adapted version) Online counselling attitude scale Self-stigma of seeking help scale Self-concealment scale Interpersonal support evaluation list Inventory of attitudes toward seeking mental health services Loss of face scale Intent to seek counseling inventory General Help Seeking Questionnaire | Moderate* |
| Vahabi and Wong (2017) [ | 25 Filipino women, age range from 25 to 60 years old | Canada | Community-based | Qualitative Focus group discussion | Semi-structured focus group discussion guide | Good** |
*Quality assessment based on the criteria of EPHPP Quality Assessment Tool for quantitative studies
**Quality assessment based on the criteria of CASP Qualitative Checklist for qualitative studies
Report on formal help-seeking behaviors
| Study | Reports of formal help-seeking behaviors | Outcome measures |
|---|---|---|
| Quantitative studies | ||
| Abe-Kim et al. (2007) [ | 2.60% ( | Validated research questionnaire from National Latino and Asian American Study |
| Bernardo and Estrellado (2017) | All participants ( | Validated research questionnaire |
| Cabbigat and Kangas (2017) | 39.32% ( | Validated research questionnaire |
| David (2010) [ | No reports on formal help-seeking behavior | |
| Gong et al. (2003) [ | 4.42% ( | Validated research questionnaire from Filipino American Community Epidemiological Study |
| Green and Ayalon (2016) [ | 4.7% reported solely formally, 17.5% ( | Validated research questionnaire |
| Hermannsdottir and Aegisdottir (2016) | 12.4% ( | Validated research questionnaire |
| Nguyen (2011) [ | 2.2% ( | Validated research questionnaire from California Health Interview Survey |
| Tuliao et al. (2016) [ | 22.19% ( | Standardized measures |
| Qualitative studies | ||
| Hechanova et al. (2013) [ | 10.68% ( | Semi-structured open-ended questionnaire |
| Shoultz et al. (2010) [ | Participants were receiving help from an agency that supports victims of intimate partner violence | Semi-structured interview guide |
| Straiton et al. (2018) [ | None of the women had sought help for mental health problems | Semi-structured interview guide with open-ended questions |
| Vahabi and Wong (2017) [ | Only one participant indicated that she had used a counselor/ psychotherapist; participants neither used existing mental health services nor knew what services were available to them | Semi-structured focus group discussion guide |
| Mixed methods | ||
| Ho et al. (2018) [ | No reports on formal help-seeking behavior | |
| Thompson et al. (2002) [ | No reports on formal help-seeking behavior |
Key themes on barriers to formal help-seeking
| Key barrier themes | Studies on local Filipinos ( | Studies on overseas Filipinos ( | Total ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| (A) Systemic, structural and economic barriers | |||
| 1. Financial constraints (e.g., high cost of service, lack of health insurance, fear of losing job, precarious nature of employment) | 2 | 10 | 12 (80%) |
| 2. Inaccessibility of mental health services (e.g., lack of familiarity or information on available mental health services, different structure of mental health system, lack of time, geographical dispersal) | 2 | 6 | 8 (53%) |
| 3. Immigration/Residency status (e.g., nativity, fear of deportation) | N/A | 7 | 7 (47%) |
| (B) Socio-cultural barriers | |||
| 1. Social stigma (e.g., attack on family reputation or negative perception of one’s cultural group, preservation of the family’s dignity, fear of social exclusion, being labelled as ‘crazy’) | 2 | 8 | 10 (67%) |
| 2. Sense of religiosity (e.g., preference for religious clergy, strong religious belief, reliance on faith organizations) and/or spirituality | 2 | 6 | 8 (53%) |
| 3. Language difficulty (e.g., lack of language proficiency in the host country) | 0 | 6 | 6 (40%) |
| 4. Adherence to Asian cultural values of conformity; lack of acculturation | 1 | 4 | 5 (33%) |
| 5. Use of alternative health care (e.g., indigenous healing methods, use of herbal medicines, consultation with elders in the community) | 0 | 2 | 2 (13%) |
| (C) Psychosocial barriers | |||
| 1. Self-stigma (e.g., concern for loss of face, sense of shame or embarrassment, fear of being judged negatively, fear of negative reactions from family or friends, sense of being a disgrace, self-blame, fear of being labeled as ‘crazy’, sense of being weak) | 2 | 9 | 11 (73%) |
| 2. Influence of social support/network (e.g., presence of and preference for family and friends as source of help, lack of friends to provide influence) | 3 | 6 | 9 (60%) |
| 3. Previous negative experience of help-seeking (e.g., experience of discrimination, lack of trust on or rapport with healthcare provider) | 1 | 7 | 8 (53%) |
| 4. Concerns on confidentiality and privacy, treatment fears e.g., concerns on trustworthiness or competence of the mental health care provider, effect of medication) | 2 | 5 | 7 (47%) |
| 5. Lack of awareness of mental health need (e.g., low perception of distress; normalization of mental health problems) | 1 | 6 | 7 (47%) |
| 6. Misconceptions about mental illness (i.e., on nature, causes and effects of mental health problems) | 2 | 4 | 6 (40%) |
| 7. Sense of self-reliance (e.g., perceived resilience, coping ability, sense of self-responsibility) | 0 | 3 | 3 (20%) |
| 8. Fear of hurting or becoming burden to others | 0 | 3 | 3 (20%) |
Key themes on facilitators in help-seeking
| Key facilitator themes | Studies on local Filipinos ( | Studies on overseas Filipinos ( | Total ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| (A) Systemic and economic facilitators | |||
| 1. Financial capacity (e.g., higher socio-economic status, employment status, medical insurance, higher income) | 1 | 4 | 5 (33%) |
| 2. Immigration/Residency status (e.g., nativity status, being US-born Filipino American, later-generation immigrants) | N/A | 3 | 3 (20%) |
| 3. Accessibility of mental health services (e.g., technological access, presence of technical infrastructure, perception of ease of use, familiarity with health care services) | 0 | 2 | 2 (13%) |
| (B) Socio-cultural facilitators | |||
| 1. Language proficiency (e.g., bilingualism, proficiency of the language of host culture) | 0 | 4 | 4 (27%) |
| 2. Lower adherence to Asian cultural values (e.g., higher levels of acculturation/assimilation) | 0 | 3 | 3 (20%) |
| 3. Higher level of spirituality | 0 | 2 | 2 (13%) |
| (C) Psycho-social facilitators | |||
| 1. Perception of distress (e.g., awareness of mental health need; higher severity of mental health problems) | 2 | 5 | 7 (47%) |
| 2. Influence of social support (presence/absence of family and friends, witnessing friends seeking help, having supportive friends and family who encourage help-seeking, others taking the initiative to help) | 2 | 4 | 6 (40%) |
| 3. Self-stigma tolerance (e.g., concern for loss of face, lower/higher tolerance of stigma) | 1 | 3 | 4 (27%) |
| 4. Previous experience in help-seeking (e.g., positive experience with mental health professionals, establishing rapport with mental health providers) | 2 | 2 | 4 (27%) |
| 5. Higher awareness of mental health issues | 2 | 0 | 2 (13%) |
| 6. Sense of anonymity | 1 | 1 | 2 (13%) |