2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2007.01030.x
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Explaining non‐help‐seeking amongst young adults with mental distress: a dynamic interpretive model of illness behaviour

Abstract: Mental disorder is common amongst young adults and is associated with many adverse outcomes. Data, however, indicate that young adults are particularly unlikely to seek help for such distress. This paper describes a qualitative study of 23 young adults (aged 16 to 24 years) with mental distress. Interviewing was used to obtain detailed narratives of illness behaviour and to explore reasons for non-help-seeking. Help-seekers and non-help-seekers were interviewed. The findings allowed development of an explanato… Show more

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Cited by 211 publications
(270 citation statements)
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References 36 publications
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“…Notably, as dominant models continue to be emphasized, the empirical development of dynamic models of help seeking has been limited (Pescosolido & Boyer, 1999), though important examples do exist (e.g., Biddle et al, 2007). Furthermore, in accepting interactive subjectivities over time, this approach is complicated by the significant diversity and concurrency of illnessrelated needs, supports, and related processes shifting over the context of an illness experience, as well as the complexity of experiences and identities men bring into the process.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Notably, as dominant models continue to be emphasized, the empirical development of dynamic models of help seeking has been limited (Pescosolido & Boyer, 1999), though important examples do exist (e.g., Biddle et al, 2007). Furthermore, in accepting interactive subjectivities over time, this approach is complicated by the significant diversity and concurrency of illnessrelated needs, supports, and related processes shifting over the context of an illness experience, as well as the complexity of experiences and identities men bring into the process.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Biddle et al (2007) noted, research can benefit from explicitly examining the perceptions and interpretations ("drivers of action") that move individuals away from supports rather than viewing these as barriers to the process. Awareness that perceptions of need and meanings of help can pull men from supports is implicit in existing research on men's help seeking, particularly in research adopting a social constructionist approach accepting health behaviors as performances of masculinity.…”
Section: Examining the Dynamics Of Men's Healthrelated Help Seekingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This modern orientation of sociology has had repercussions for the evolution of conceptual models of helpseeking processes in health care. Beginning in the 1990s, these models have generally complemented traditional approaches that came under growing criticism for their reliance upon a static and individualistic approach founded on the concept of rational choice (Biddle, Donovan, Sharp, and Gunnell, 2007;Pescosolido, 1992;Shengelia, Tandon, Adams, and Murray, 2005). In contrast, the new models emphasize the dynamics of change and account for historical events and exchanges at the microsocial level (Berkman and Glass, 2000;Messeri, Silverstein and Litwak, 1993;Pescosolido, 1992).…”
Section: Multiple Contingent and Fractured Conceptions Of Societymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We find a number of works bearing on modelizations of the process of help seeking [16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24]. Nevertheless, there is no consensus on the greater relevance of any one model [25].…”
Section: The Process Of Help Seeking Behaviormentioning
confidence: 99%