Department of Applied Social Sciences, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University.
J Couns Psychol. 2008 Oct;55(4):442-50. doi: 10.1037/a0012898.
In the present study, the authors examined the contributions of cultural beliefs about the etiology of mental illness to the seeking of help from mental health professionals among college students in 4 cultural groups, European Americans, Chinese Americans, Hong Kong Chinese, and Mainland Chinese. Group differences were found in help-seeking history and likelihood, with European and Chinese Americans being more likely to seek help than Hong Kong and Mainland Chinese. Multiple-group path analysis showed that lay beliefs about causes of mental illness and prior help-seeking history significantly predicted help-seeking likelihood, which was related positively to environmental/hereditary causes but negatively to social-personal causes. Our findings demonstrate the importance of understanding help-seeking patterns within specific cultural contexts and the effects of Western influences on shaping help-seeking propensities. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved).
在本研究中,作者考察了文化信念对精神疾病病因的影响,以及这种影响如何作用于来自 4 个文化群体(欧裔美国人、华裔美国人、中国香港人和中国大陆人)的大学生寻求心理健康专业人员帮助的行为。研究发现,在寻求帮助的历史和可能性上,欧裔美国人和华裔美国人比中国香港人和中国大陆人更有可能寻求帮助。多群体路径分析显示,对精神疾病病因的民间信念和以往的寻求帮助的历史显著预测了寻求帮助的可能性,这种可能性与环境/遗传原因呈正相关,但与社会/个人原因呈负相关。我们的研究结果表明,在特定文化背景下理解寻求帮助的模式以及西方影响对塑造寻求帮助倾向的重要性。