“…College students also consistently demonstrate an inverse link between self-stigma and help-seeking intentions (Topkaya, Vogel, & Brenner, 2017; Tucker et al, 2013; Vogel et al, 2007). Intentions is an important outcome in help-seeking research; the theory of planned behavior indicates that intention is the direct antecedent to behavior (Ajzen & Fishbein, 1980), and intentions have predicted actual help seeking 2 weeks (Bitman-Heinrichs, 2017) and 3 months (Hammer & Spiker, 2018) later. Consistent with the internalized stigma model, self-stigma is more proximally linked than is public stigma to lower intentions to seek help, lower likelihood of seeking online mental health information, and decreased likelihood of attending subsequent therapy sessions (e.g., Lannin et al, 2016; Manos, Rüsch, Kanter, & Clifford, 2009; Shechtman, Alim, Brenner, & Vogel, 2018; Vogel et al, 2007; Wade, Post, Cornish, Vogel, & Tucker, 2011).…”