4.6 Article

Seeking treatment for mental illness and substance abuse: A cross-sectional study on attitudes, beliefs, and needs of military personnel with and without mental illness

Journal

JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH
Volume 147, Issue -, Pages 221-231

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2022.01.028

Keywords

Mental illness; Substance abuse; Treatment; Military; Stigma

Categories

Funding

  1. IMPACT PhD Program 2018 of Tilburg University
  2. Dutch Ministry of Defence

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This study aimed to investigate the attitudes, beliefs, and needs of military personnel in seeking treatment for mental illness. The majority of participants believed in the effectiveness of treatment but preferred to solve their own problems. The study suggests that interventions should focus on promoting self-management, reducing stigma, and providing clear guidance on where to seek treatment.
Background: Often, military personnel do not seek treatment for mental illness or wait until they reach a crisis point. Effective, selective, and indicated prevention is best achieved by seeking treatment early.& nbsp;Aims: We aimed to examine military personnel's attitudes, beliefs, and needs around seeking treatment for mental illness. We compared those who sought treatment to those who did not and those with and without the intention to seek treatment. Finally, we examined factors associated with intentions of not seeking treatment.& nbsp;Method: We conducted a cross-sectional questionnaire study of military personnel with (N = 324) and without (N = 554) mental illness. Descriptive and regression analyses (logistic and ordinal) were performed.& nbsp;Results: The majority of the personnel believed treatment was effective (91.6%); however, most preferred to solve their own problems (66.0%). For personnel with mental illness, compared to those who sought treatment, those who did not had a higher preference for self-management and found advice from others less important. For those without mental illness, those with no intention to seek treatment indicated a higher preference for self management, stigma-related concerns, denial of symptoms, lower belief in treatment effectiveness and found it less important to be an example, compared to those with treatment-seeking intentions. A clear indication of where to seek help was the most reported need (95.7%). Regression analyses indicated that not seeking treatment was most strongly related to preference for self-management (OR(95%CI) = 4.36(2.02-9.39); no intention to seek treatment was most strongly related to a lower belief that treatment is effective (OR(95%CI) = .41 (0.28-0.59) and with not having had positive earlier experiences with treatment seeking (OR(95%CI) = .34 (0.22-0.52).& nbsp;Conclusions: To facilitate (early) treatment seeking, interventions should align with a high preference for self management, mental illness stigma should be targeted, and a clear indication of where to seek treatment is needed.

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