Mental health treatment seeking among veteran and civilian community college students

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Abstract

Objective: A Web-based survey examined treatment seeking among community college students to inform the design of engagement interventions. Methods: Veteran and civilian community college students (N=765) were screened for mental disorders and reported perceptions of treatment need, effectiveness, and stigma, as well as service use. Regression analysis identified predictors of pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy use. Results: Of the 511 students who screened positive for a current mental disorder or reported a perceived need for treatment (149 veterans and 362 civilians), 30% reported past-year use of psychotropic medications. Predictors were perceived treatment need (odds ratio [OR]=7.81, p<001) and the perception that psychotropic medications are effective (OR=3.38, p=.012). Eleven percent of participants reported past-year psychotherapy use, and predictors were a positive screen for posttraumatic stress disorder (OR=2.78, p=.04) and poorer financial status. Conclusions: Modifiable barriers, including perceived need for and effectiveness of treatment, were correlated with pharmacotherapy use and should be targeted by engagement interventions.

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APA

Fortney, J. C., Curran, G. M., Hunt, J. B., Lu, L., Eisenberg, D., & Valenstein, M. (2017). Mental health treatment seeking among veteran and civilian community college students. Psychiatric Services, 68(8), 851–855. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.201600240

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