Help seeking for emotional and behavioural problems in children and adolescents
Publication date
2003
Authors
Zwaanswijk, Marieke
Verhaak, P.F.M.
Bensing, J.
Ende, J. van der
Verhulst, F.C.
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
In order to understand the discrepancy between rates of child and adolescent psychopathology and rates of mental health service use, variables influencing the
help-seeking process need to be investigated.
The present article aims to extend and refine previous findings by reviewing 47 recent empirical studies on parental and adolescent problem recognition and help
seeking, and problem recognition by the general practitioner (GP). Several variables (child age, the presence of medical and school-related problems, informal help seeking, past treatment of parents or
relatives, family size, and type of
maltreatment) were discovered to influence parental/adolescent problem recognition and/or help seeking,while refinements were
found for the effects of type of psychopathology, child gender, adolescent
attitudes and personality, parental psychopathology, social support, and sociodemographic variables. Although recent studies uncovered several determinants of
problem recognition by the GP (child gender, age, past treatment, academic problems, family composition, life events, type of visit, and acquaintance with child), this aspect of the help-seeking pathway
remains relatively uncharted and,
therefore, needs to be the focus of
future research.
Keywords
help seeking, child and adolescent psychopathology, problem recognition, mental health services