Barriers to School-Based Mental Health Resource Utilization Among Black Adolescent Males.

IF 2.7 3区 社会学 Q1 SOCIAL WORK
Ed-Dee Williams, Husain Lateef, Adrian Gale, Donte Boyd, Jeffrey Albrecht, Jill Paladino, Elizabeth Koschmann
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Abstract

Black adolescent males use available mental health services at a disproportionately lower rate compared to males of other racial groups. This study examines barriers to school-based mental health resource (SBMHR) use among Black adolescent males, as a means of addressing reduced usage of available mental health resources and to improve these resources to better support their mental health needs. Secondary data for 165 Black adolescent males were used from a mental health needs assessment of two high schools in southeast Michigan. Logistic regression was employed to examine the predictive power of psychosocial (self-reliance, stigma, trust, and negative previous experience) and access barriers (no transportation, lack of time, lack of insurance, and parental restrictions) on SBMHR use, as well as the relationship between depression and SBMHR use. No access barriers were found to be significantly associated with SBMHR use. However, self-reliance and stigma were statistically significant predictors of SBMHR use. Participants who identified self-reliance in addressing their mental health symptoms were 77% less likely to use available mental health resources in their school. However, participants who reported stigma as a barrier to using SBMHR were nearly four times more likely to use available mental health resources; this suggests potential protective factors in schools that can be built into mental health resources to support Black adolescent males' use of SBMHRs. This study serves as an early step in exploring how SBMHRs can better serve the needs of Black adolescent males. It also speaks to potential protective factors that schools provide for Black adolescent males who have stigmatized views of mental health and mental health services. Future studies would benefit from a nationally representative sample allowing for more generalizable results regarding barriers and facilitators to Black adolescent males' use of school-based mental health resources.

黑人青少年男性学校心理健康资源利用的障碍。
与其他种族群体的男性相比,黑人青少年男性使用现有心理健康服务的比率低得不成比例。这项研究考察了黑人青少年男性在使用学校心理健康资源(SBMHR)方面的障碍,以此解决可用心理健康资源使用减少的问题,并改进这些资源,更好地支持他们的心理健康需求。165名黑人青少年男性的二级数据来自密歇根州东南部两所高中的心理健康需求评估。采用Logistic回归检验心理社会(自立、耻辱、信任和负面既往经历)和获取障碍(没有交通工具、缺乏时间、缺乏保险和父母限制)对SBMHR使用的预测能力,以及抑郁症和SBMHR的使用之间的关系。没有发现进入障碍与SBMHR的使用显著相关。然而,自立和耻辱是SBMHR使用的统计学显著预测因素。在解决心理健康症状方面表现出自力更生的参与者使用学校可用心理健康资源的可能性降低77%。然而,报告称污名是使用SBMHR障碍的参与者使用可用心理健康资源的可能性几乎是其他参与者的四倍;这表明,学校中的潜在保护因素可以纳入心理健康资源,以支持黑人青少年男性使用SBMHR。这项研究是探索SBMHR如何更好地满足黑人青少年男性需求的早期步骤。它还谈到了学校为那些对心理健康和心理健康服务持污名化观点的黑人青少年男性提供的潜在保护因素。未来的研究将受益于一个具有全国代表性的样本,该样本可以就黑人青少年男性使用学校心理健康资源的障碍和促进因素得出更普遍的结果。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
3.60%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: Clinical Social Work Journal is an international forum devoted to the advancement of clinical knowledge and acumen of practitioners, educators, researchers, and policymakers. The journal, founded in 1973, publishes leading peer-reviewed original articles germane to contemporary clinical practice with individuals, couples, families, and groups, and welcomes submissions that reflect innovations in theoretical, practice , evidence-based clinical research, and interdisciplinary approaches.
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