Journal of Counseling Psychology, volume 70, issue 2, pages 133-145
Beyond the individual: Sexual minority help-seeking and the consequences of structural barriers.
Elliot S. Spengler
1
,
David Tierney
1
,
David M. Tierney
1
,
L. Christian Elledge
1
,
Patrick R. Grzanka
1
1
Department of Psychology.
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2023-03-01
Journal:
Journal of Counseling Psychology
scimago Q1
SJR: 1.794
CiteScore: 7.6
Impact factor: 3.8
ISSN: 00220167, 19392168
PubMed ID:
36633995
General Medicine
Clinical Psychology
Psychiatry and Mental health
Social Psychology
Abstract
Sexual minorities report more psychological distress, unmet mental health needs, and barriers to mental health care compared with heterosexuals, yet little is known about their barriers to seeking out mental health care. The present study reports the factors that influence intentions to seek out mental health care of a national survey of 398 sexual minorities. Structural equation modeling identified structural barriers, such as cost, time, and knowing how to access services, as the strongest predictor of sexual minorities' help-seeking intentions. Latent moderators indicated sexual minorities' help-seeking intentions varied depending upon their degree of psychological distress. This revealed a pattern where the most vulnerable participants (i.e., those with high structural barriers and negative help-seeking attitudes) were willing to pursue mental health care only when they were experiencing significant distress. Furthermore, nearly 40% of participants reported unmet mental health needs, and structural barriers were the primary reasons for this deficit. Findings from this study contrast with previous mental health help-seeking research by emphasizing the importance of structural vulnerability, which refers to the external forces that frame and constrain choices, thereby impeding decision-making and limiting life options for those who are in systemically disadvantaged social positions. These findings are discussed in terms of counseling psychology training, practice, social justice advocacy, and future health care research. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
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