Soc
Sci Med 1987;24(3):187-96
Treatment-seeking for depression by black and white Americans.
Sussman LK, Robins LN, Earls F.
This paper examines data from a psychiatric epidemiologic survey of 3004
households in St Louis to determine whether there are distinctions between
black and white Americans in their propensities to seek treatment for
episodes of depression and to discover those groups least likely to seek
care. The process initiated by the experiencing of unusual or distressing
signs or symptoms and completed by seeking treatment for those complaints
is a complex one, involving several steps. Numerous factors may affect
decisions regarding treatment-seeking including characteristics of the
individuals themselves, characteristics of the symptoms, and attitudes
and beliefs about the causes and proper treatment of psychiatric problems
or mood. We, therefore, also examine the available epidemiologic data
for some clues concerning those factors which may have contributed to
the observed patterns of treatment-seeking. Significantly fewer blacks
meeting psychiatric criteria for a diagnosis of depression had sought
professional care. Moreover, severity of the problem was significantly
related to treatment-seeking among blacks and it was among those with
the least severe problems that the greatest differences were found. Whites
did not significantly exceed blacks in seeking care when depressive episodes
were long lasting, severe or frequent. Although there was some indication
that blacks may be more tolerant of depressive symptoms, a considerable
proportion of blacks who felt they had a troublesome problem had never
sought professional care. There was little evidence to suggest that a
fear of being stigmatized prevented blacks from seeking care. However,
blacks were more likely to report that fear of treatment and of being
hospitalized had prevented them from seeking care. A number of hypotheses
generated by the epidemiologic data are presented. Once large-scale surveys
such as this have delineated the patterns of health care utilization and
identified those groups at high risk of not receiving care, anthropological
concepts and problem-oriented field research may be extremely useful in
testing hypotheses concerning those factors underlying the observed behavioral
patterns.
PMID: 3824001 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]