Psychological distress, attitudes toward seeking help, and utilization of college counseling at a predominantly minority college.

J Am Coll Health

NYS Licensed Psychologist, Student Psychological Counselor, Counseling Center, Room AC-1G03E, York College/CUNY, Jamaica, NY, USA.

Published: April 2023

Objective: This study examined psychological distress among students at a predominantly-minority college, attitudes toward seeking help, and utilization of college counseling services. Demographic variables and associations between 8 problem areas (depression, generalized anxiety, social anxiety, academic stress, eating concerns, family distress, hostility, substance use) were explored.

Participants: Participants were 347 students at a large public university.

Methods: In 2016-2017, students completed a Web-based questionnaire providing information about their mental health, attitudes toward seeking help, and utilization of counseling services.

Results: Psychological distress was significantly higher for LGBQT, Muslim and female students and lower for Christian affiliated and religious students. LGBQT students were less likely to seek psychological help than other students. Utilization of college counseling did not differ by race or gender.

Conclusions: Administrators at PMCs must increase their efforts to disseminate information about mental health services and reduce barriers to seeking help, particularly for LGBQT, female and Muslim students.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07448481.2021.1908301DOI Listing

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