Factors Associated With Service Use for Young Adolescents With Mental Health Problems

The objective of the study wasto identify factors associated with use of services for adolescent mental health problems in an Australian community-based sample. Logistic regression analysis was conducted on data collected from 636 parents and their adolescent child to identify individual and family...

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Main Authors: Siobhan M. Ryan, John W. Toumbourou, Anthony F. Jorm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2014-11-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244014556286
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spelling doaj-f12813936173481081b189ab57a3c23e2020-11-25T03:45:23ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402014-11-01410.1177/215824401455628610.1177_2158244014556286Factors Associated With Service Use for Young Adolescents With Mental Health ProblemsSiobhan M. Ryan0John W. Toumbourou1Anthony F. Jorm2Deakin University, Melbourne, Victoria, AustraliaDeakin University, Melbourne, Victoria, AustraliaUniversity of Melbourne, Victoria, AustraliaThe objective of the study wasto identify factors associated with use of services for adolescent mental health problems in an Australian community-based sample. Logistic regression analysis was conducted on data collected from 636 parents and their adolescent child to identify individual and family variables predicting parent report of service use for mental health problems in the adolescent 12 months later. The services most reported by parents to have been accessed were school-based ones. Multivariate analysis found that the following were associated with service use 12 months later: the adolescent being female, parent report of peer problems and hyperactivity, single-parent household, the parent being Australian born, and prior service use by the adolescent. Parental overcontrol was associated with reduced likelihood of service use at follow-up. No association was found between service use at follow-up and parent gender, socioeconomic status, number of siblings, parent psychopathology, family social connectedness, and prior service use by the parent. No association was also found for family environment factors, parental attachment, or for the adolescent’s emotional competence or use of social support. The results indicate that families provide a potential target for interventions aimed at increasing use of professional services for adolescent mental health problems.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244014556286
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Siobhan M. Ryan
John W. Toumbourou
Anthony F. Jorm
spellingShingle Siobhan M. Ryan
John W. Toumbourou
Anthony F. Jorm
Factors Associated With Service Use for Young Adolescents With Mental Health Problems
SAGE Open
author_facet Siobhan M. Ryan
John W. Toumbourou
Anthony F. Jorm
author_sort Siobhan M. Ryan
title Factors Associated With Service Use for Young Adolescents With Mental Health Problems
title_short Factors Associated With Service Use for Young Adolescents With Mental Health Problems
title_full Factors Associated With Service Use for Young Adolescents With Mental Health Problems
title_fullStr Factors Associated With Service Use for Young Adolescents With Mental Health Problems
title_full_unstemmed Factors Associated With Service Use for Young Adolescents With Mental Health Problems
title_sort factors associated with service use for young adolescents with mental health problems
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2014-11-01
description The objective of the study wasto identify factors associated with use of services for adolescent mental health problems in an Australian community-based sample. Logistic regression analysis was conducted on data collected from 636 parents and their adolescent child to identify individual and family variables predicting parent report of service use for mental health problems in the adolescent 12 months later. The services most reported by parents to have been accessed were school-based ones. Multivariate analysis found that the following were associated with service use 12 months later: the adolescent being female, parent report of peer problems and hyperactivity, single-parent household, the parent being Australian born, and prior service use by the adolescent. Parental overcontrol was associated with reduced likelihood of service use at follow-up. No association was found between service use at follow-up and parent gender, socioeconomic status, number of siblings, parent psychopathology, family social connectedness, and prior service use by the parent. No association was also found for family environment factors, parental attachment, or for the adolescent’s emotional competence or use of social support. The results indicate that families provide a potential target for interventions aimed at increasing use of professional services for adolescent mental health problems.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244014556286
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