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Utah Youth Suicide Study: Barriers to Mental Health Treatment for Adolescents


Author(s): Michelle A. Moskos | Lenora Olson | Sarah R. Halbern | Doug Gray
doi: 10.1521/suli.2007.37.2.179
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  Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior
 
Print ISSN: 0363-0234
Volume: 37 | Issue: 2
Cover date: April 2007
Page(s): 179-186
 
 
  Abstract

Forty-nine suicide cases were drawn from an original sample of 151 consecutive youth suicide deaths. We used information from 270 interviews with parents and other survivors to evaluate mental health treatment sought for and by the decedent and barriers to mental health treatment. Participants reported the same primary barriers for the decedent: belief that nothing could help, seeking help is a sign of weakness or failure, reluctance to admit to having mental health problems, denial of problems, and too embarrassed to seek help. It is suggested that the stigma of mental illness is a considerable barrier to mental health treatment.

 
  Author(s) affiliations
 
1 University of Utah School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics and the Intermountain Injury Control Research Center
2 University of Utah School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry
Address correspondence to Michelle Moskos, PhD, MPH, P.O. Box 581289, Salt Lake City, Utah, 84158-1289.