Barriers to mental health treatment: results from the National Comorbidity Survey Replication
Johns Hopkins University · New York State Psychiatric Institute · +6 more institutions
Abstract
The aim was to examine barriers to initiation and continuation of treatment among individuals with common mental disorders in the US general population. METHOD: Respondents in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication with common 12-month DSM-IV mood, anxiety, substance, impulse control and childhood disorders were asked about perceived need for treatment, structural barriers and attitudinal/evaluative barriers to initiation and continuation of treatment.
Low perceived need was reported by 44.8% of respondents with a disorder who did not seek treatment. Desire to handle the problem on one's own was the most common reason among respondents with perceived need both for not seeking treatment (72.6%) and for dropping out of treatment (42.2%). Attitudinal/evaluative factors were much more important than structural barriers both to initiating (97.4% v. 22.2%) and to continuing (81.9% v. 31.8%) of treatment. Reasons for not seeking treatment varied with illness severity. Low perceived need was a more common reason for not seeking treatment among individuals with mild (57.0%) than moderate (39.3%) or severe (25.9%) disorders, whereas structural and attitudinal/evaluative barriers were more common among respondents with more severe conditions.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 7.41
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 50
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Anxiety
- Psychiatry
- Mental health
- Comorbidity
- Clinical psychology
- Population
- Psychology
- Mood
- Good health and well-being