4.3 Article

African American Women's Beliefs, Coping Behaviors, and Barriers to Seeking Mental Health Services

Journal

QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH
Volume 19, Issue 11, Pages 1589-1601

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1049732309350686

Keywords

African Americans; coping and adaptation; dimensional analysis; mental health and illness; stigma; women's health

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Little is known about African American women's beliefs about mental illness. In this qualitative study we employed the Common Sense Model (CSM) to examine African American women's beliefs about mental illness, coping behaviors, barriers to treatment seeking, and variations in beliefs, coping, and barriers associated with aging. Fifteen community-dwelling African American women participated in individual interviews. Dimensional analysis, guided by the CSM, showed that participants believed general, culturally specific, and age-related factors can cause mental illness. They believed mental illness is chronic, with negative health outcomes. Participants endorsed the use of prayer and counseling as coping strategies, but were ambivalent about the use of medications. Treatment-seeking barriers included poor access to care, stigma, and lack of awareness of mental illness. Few age differences were found in beliefs, coping behaviors, and barriers. Practice and research implications are discussed.

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