Barriers to Mental Health Service Use and Predictors of Treatment Drop Out: Racial/Ethnic Variation in a Population-Based Study.
Jennifer Greif GreenKatie A McLaughlinMirko FillbrunnMarie FukudaJames S JacksonRonald C KesslerEkaterina SadikovaNancy A SampsonCorrie VilsaintDavid R WilliamsMario Cruz-GonzalezMargarita AlegríaPublished in: Administration and policy in mental health (2021)
This study examines racial/ethnic differences in perceived need for mental health treatment, barriers to treatment receipt, and reasons for dropout. Data are from the Collaborative Psychiatric Epidemiology Studies, a pooled dataset from three U.S. nationally-representative adult samples. Among respondents with a 12-month psychiatric disorder who received no treatment (N = 1417), Asians and Latinos reported lower perceived need than Blacks and Whites, and Latinos reported the fewest attitudinal barriers. Among those with a 12-month disorder who dropped out of treatment, Asians and Latinos gave more reasons for dropping out. Significant interactions of race/ethnicity with other characteristics identified subpopulations with high unmet need.