Differential Help Seeking Among College Students

abstract: Research on psychological help seeking has continued to grow as the field of psychology has expanded. Much of the research is often variable driven and assumes this construct is a global construct. The current study used the Theory of Planned Behavior to provide a theory based approach to...

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Other Authors: Hess, Timothy Robert (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9509
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-95092018-06-22T03:02:10Z Differential Help Seeking Among College Students abstract: Research on psychological help seeking has continued to grow as the field of psychology has expanded. Much of the research is often variable driven and assumes this construct is a global construct. The current study used the Theory of Planned Behavior to provide a theory based approach to understanding psychological help seeking intention. Also, the theory was tested for three common presenting concerns: Anxiety or Depression, Career Choice Concerns, and Alcohol or Substance Use. Two samples of over 400 university students completed surveys for all three concerns. Results produced invariance across path loadings for the concerns being compared. When thinking about seeking psychological help, university students do not appear to consider the type of concern but do rely on attitude, stigma, and how much control and efficacy they have to address their problems on their own. Mean differences emerged for some variables in the model, but no meaningful mean differences were noted for gender. Overall, the variables used in the decision making process do not appear to consider concern when seeking help, but the beliefs about seeking help differ some. These results extend the Theory of Planned Behavior to consider the importance of an individual's ability to address their problem on their own. When considering psychological help seeking, college students have similar attitudes and beliefs about their ability to access mental health resources, their beliefs about stigma, ability to address their problems on their own, and their intention to seek help vary more by concern. The specific concerns being addressed does not appear to impact the weight each variable is given in the decision making process; attitude, stigma, and ability to solve the problem on their own appear to be the variables given greatest consideration. Dissertation/Thesis Hess, Timothy Robert (Author) Tracey, Terence J. G. (Advisor) Claiborn, Charles (Committee member) Sheu, Hung-Bin (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Counseling Psychology college students help seeking behavior path analysis theory of planned behavior eng 142 pages Ph.D. Counseling Psychology 2011 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9509 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2011
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Counseling Psychology
college students
help seeking behavior
path analysis
theory of planned behavior
spellingShingle Counseling Psychology
college students
help seeking behavior
path analysis
theory of planned behavior
Differential Help Seeking Among College Students
description abstract: Research on psychological help seeking has continued to grow as the field of psychology has expanded. Much of the research is often variable driven and assumes this construct is a global construct. The current study used the Theory of Planned Behavior to provide a theory based approach to understanding psychological help seeking intention. Also, the theory was tested for three common presenting concerns: Anxiety or Depression, Career Choice Concerns, and Alcohol or Substance Use. Two samples of over 400 university students completed surveys for all three concerns. Results produced invariance across path loadings for the concerns being compared. When thinking about seeking psychological help, university students do not appear to consider the type of concern but do rely on attitude, stigma, and how much control and efficacy they have to address their problems on their own. Mean differences emerged for some variables in the model, but no meaningful mean differences were noted for gender. Overall, the variables used in the decision making process do not appear to consider concern when seeking help, but the beliefs about seeking help differ some. These results extend the Theory of Planned Behavior to consider the importance of an individual's ability to address their problem on their own. When considering psychological help seeking, college students have similar attitudes and beliefs about their ability to access mental health resources, their beliefs about stigma, ability to address their problems on their own, and their intention to seek help vary more by concern. The specific concerns being addressed does not appear to impact the weight each variable is given in the decision making process; attitude, stigma, and ability to solve the problem on their own appear to be the variables given greatest consideration. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Counseling Psychology 2011
author2 Hess, Timothy Robert (Author)
author_facet Hess, Timothy Robert (Author)
title Differential Help Seeking Among College Students
title_short Differential Help Seeking Among College Students
title_full Differential Help Seeking Among College Students
title_fullStr Differential Help Seeking Among College Students
title_full_unstemmed Differential Help Seeking Among College Students
title_sort differential help seeking among college students
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9509
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