Mental Health Values and Preference for Mental Health Resources of Japanese-American and Caucasian-American Students

The authors investigated Asian-American underuse of mental health resources as a function of attitudes about the nature of mental health (mental health values) and resource preference for assistance with serious personal problems, with 91 Caucasian-American and 90 Japanese-American undergraduates. M...

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Veröffentlicht in:Professional psychology, research and practice research and practice, 1990-08, Vol.21 (4), p.291-296
Hauptverfasser: Suan, Lance V, Tyler, John D
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The authors investigated Asian-American underuse of mental health resources as a function of attitudes about the nature of mental health (mental health values) and resource preference for assistance with serious personal problems, with 91 Caucasian-American and 90 Japanese-American undergraduates. Mental Health Values Questionnaire (MHVQ) results revealed that Japanese Americans more strongly related several MHVQ scales to mental health (good interpersonal relations, trustworthiness, and absence of negative personal traits) than did Caucasian Americans. Nevertheless, they were less likely than Caucasian Americans to rank mental health professionals as first choice for assistance with serious interpersonal/emotional problems and more likely to prefer close friends for assistance. Mental health values and attitudes about appropriate help-seeking behavior are discussed in relation to the Asian-American underuse phenomenon.
ISSN:0735-7028
1939-1323
DOI:10.1037/0735-7028.21.4.291