1. How communicative environments affect college students’ mental health help-seeking during COVID-19: a cross-sectional study.
- Author
-
Wu, Qiwei Luna and Street, Richard L. Jr.
- Abstract
Abstract
Objective : This study explores how interpersonal communication environments (eg family, patient-provider, and online communication environments) affect college students’ mental help-seeking during COVID-19.Methods : Based on Social Cognitive Theory, we conducted a cross-sectional survey assessing participants’ mental help-seeking attitudes, self-stigma, self-efficacy, and readiness, as well as their communication experiences with their families, healthcare providers, and online environments. Four hundred fifty-six student participants were recruited. Structural equation modeling was used to explore relationships among the assessed variables.Results : About one-third of the participants (N = 137) had signs of mental distress, and most of them (N = 71) did not intend to seek help soon. Patient-centered communication experiences with healthcare providers were associated with reduced help-seeking stigma, whereas online and family communication predicted help-seeking readiness through changes in attitude, self-stigma, and self-efficacy.Conclusions : This study’s results help identify risk factors of help-seeking reluctance. It suggests that communicative environments affect help-seeking by influencing individual predictors. This study may inform interventions targeting college students’ use of mental health services during health crises like COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF