Avoiding Allostatic Load: Black Male Collegians and the Quest for Well-Being

V. Livingston, Breshell Jackson-Nevels, Quincy Dinnerson
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Abstract

The literature suggests that African American/Black males are less likely to seek professional assistance for mental health and other personal concerns than African American/Black females and that they are more likely to seek informal help for mental health problems than professional help. Are there circumstances where African American/Black males would seek professional help over informal help? This research updates what is currently known about African American/Black male collegians’ help-seeking behaviors and the circumstances or conditions that might influence professional help-seeking. Secondary data illustrating the help-seeking behaviors of African American/Black male collegians at an urban HBCU was examined to identify patterns or trends during the first semester of 2018 and 2019. De-identified data sheets for 103 African American/Black males were examined to identify referral sources, current mental health concerns, and past mental health concerns. African American/Black male and female collegians sought professional assistance for similar concerns: family problems, couples problems, peer interpersonal problems, depression, anxiety, and stress. Black males were more likely to self-refer for professional assistance than seek informal assistance. Implications for university counseling centers are explored.
避免非静态负荷:黑人男大学生与幸福追求
文献表明,与非裔美国人/黑人女性相比,非裔美国人和黑人男性不太可能为心理健康和其他个人问题寻求专业帮助,而且他们更容易为心理健康问题寻求非正式帮助,而不是专业帮助。是否存在非裔美国人/黑人男性会寻求专业帮助而非非正式帮助的情况?这项研究更新了目前已知的非裔美国人/黑人男大学生的求助行为以及可能影响专业求助的环境或条件。研究了城市HBCU非裔美国人/黑人男大学生求助行为的次要数据,以确定2018年和2019年上学期的模式或趋势。对103名非裔美国人/黑人男性的未识别数据表进行了检查,以确定转诊来源、当前心理健康问题和过去的心理健康问题。非裔美国人/黑人男女大学生为类似的问题寻求专业帮助:家庭问题、夫妻问题、同伴人际关系问题、抑郁、焦虑和压力。黑人男性更倾向于自我推荐寻求专业援助,而不是寻求非正式援助。探讨了对大学咨询中心的启示。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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