Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms (1)
- Behavioral Disciplines and Activities (1)
- Child Psychology (1)
- Clinical Epidemiology (1)
- Clinical and Medical Social Work (1)
-
- Community Health (1)
- Community Health and Preventive Medicine (1)
- Community Psychology (1)
- Counseling Psychology (1)
- Developmental Psychology (1)
- Education (1)
- Educational Psychology (1)
- Health Psychology (1)
- Health Services Research (1)
- Industrial and Organizational Psychology (1)
- Maternal and Child Health (1)
- Mental Disorders (1)
- Other Psychiatry and Psychology (1)
- Other Public Health (1)
- Personality and Social Contexts (1)
- Public Health (1)
- Public Health Education and Promotion (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Psychology
Perspectives On Help-Negation, Coralie J. Wilson
Perspectives On Help-Negation, Coralie J. Wilson
Coralie J Wilson
Help-negation refers to the process of help avoidance or refusal that commonly occurs in clinical and non-clinical samples with varying forms and levels of psychological symptoms. In the last decade the effect has been established as an inverse relationship between the severity of symptoms and help-seeking for suicidal ideation, depression, and general psychological distress, for a variety of professional and non-professional help sources [see Wilson CJ, Bushnell JA, Caputi P. Early Intervention in Psychiatry, 2011; 5: 34-39, for a review]. Findings from now over 20 help-negation studies suggest that at least some types of psychological symptoms or processes associated with …
Can Hopelessness And Adolescents’ Beliefs And Attitudes About Seeking Help Account For Help Negation?, Coralie J. Wilson
Can Hopelessness And Adolescents’ Beliefs And Attitudes About Seeking Help Account For Help Negation?, Coralie J. Wilson
Coralie J Wilson
Avoidance of appropriate help is common in acutely suicidal samples and has been confirmed in nonclinical samples but factors that contribute to this help negation effect remain unclear. The current study is the second in series from the first author's larger PhD research program. In a sample of 269 nonclinical Australian high school students, the current study examines the impact of hopelessness, previous mental health care, beliefs, and attitudes toward professional psychological help on the help negation relationship. Results revealed that suicidal ideation significantly predicted lower help seeking intentions and that although hopelessness could not explain the help negation effect, …