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Depression, help-seeking perceptions, and perceived family functioning among Spanish-Dominant Hispanics and Non-Hispanic Whites. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how perceived family functioning (PFF) affects the relationship between depression and the willingness to seek help, based on Beck's cognitive theory.
  • Both studies indicated that PFF plays a mediating role, suggesting that a positive perception of family can influence help-seeking behaviors among individuals experiencing depressive symptoms.
  • However, writing about positive family experiences negatively impacted PFF for those with high depressive symptoms, highlighting the complexity of using familial reflections to promote help-seeking, particularly in depressed individuals.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Guided by Beck's (1967) cognitive theory of depression, we assessed whether perceived family functioning (PFF) mediated the relationship between depressive symptomatology and help-seeking inclinations.

Methods: Study 1 included 130 Spanish-Dominant Hispanics and Study 2 included 124 Non-Hispanic Whites obtained using online crowd sourcing. Participants completed measures of depressive symptomatology, PFF, and several scales measuring aspects of help seeking inclinations and self-stigma. Study 2 also included an experiment. With an eye toward potential future interventions, we assessed the malleability of PFF. Specifically, participants were randomly assigned to recall positive or negative family experiences and then PFF was measures for a second time.

Results: Both studies found PFF mediates the relationship between depressive symptomatology and the help seeking scales. Among non-depressed people, the positive manipulation improved PFF; however, among participants with elevated depressive symptomatology, writing about a positive family experience worsened PFF.

Limitation: With the exception of the experiment, most of the data were cross-sectional. For the experiment, it is possible that different manipulations or primes could have different effects.

Conclusion: Whether investigating responses from Spanish-Dominant Hispanics or Non-Hispanic Whites, PFF mediates the negative relationship between heightened depressive symptomatology and familial help-seeking beliefs, as well as self-stigma. However, even though the mediation analysis offers preliminary support that increasing PFF can potentially increase help-seeking behaviors of Hispanic and Non-Hispanic White people with depression, the results of the interaction analysis, specifically the negative impact of writing about positive family memories on people with elevated depression, illustrates the challenges of persuading people with depression.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2016.05.017DOI Listing

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