Central Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Australian Research Council (ARC), Centre of Excellence for Children and Families over the Life Course, Sydney, Australia.
BMC Psychiatry. 2023 Oct 13;23(1):745. doi: 10.1186/s12888-023-05209-6.
Australian rural and regional communities are marked by geographic isolation and increasingly frequent and severe natural disasters such as drought, bushfires and floods. These circumstances strain the mental health of their inhabitants and jeopardise the healthy mental and emotional development of their adolescent populations. Professional mental health care in these communities is often inconsistent and un-coordinated. While substantial research has examined the barriers of young people's mental health and help-seeking behaviours in these communities, there is a lack of research exploring what adolescents in rural and regional areas view as facilitators to their mental health and to seeking help when it is needed. This study aims to establish an in-depth understanding of those young people's experiences and needs regarding mental health, what facilitates their help-seeking, and what kind of mental health education and support they want and find useful.
We conducted a qualitative study in 11 drought-affected rural and regional communities of New South Wales, Australia. Seventeen semi-structured (14 group; 3 individual) interviews were held with 42 year 9 and 10 high school students, 14 high school staff, and 2 parents, exploring participants' experiences of how geographical isolation and natural disasters impacted their mental health. We further examined participants' understandings and needs regarding locally available mental health support resources and their views and experiences regarding mental illness, stigma and help-seeking.
Thematic analysis highlighted that, through the lens of participants, young people's mental health and help-seeking needs would best be enabled by a well-coordinated multi-pronged community approach consisting of mental health education and support services that are locally available, free of charge, engaging, and empowering. Participants also highlighted the need to integrate young people's existing mental health supporters such as teachers, parents and school counselling services into such a community approach, recognising their strengths, limitations and own education and support needs.
We propose a three-dimensional Engagement, Empowerment, Integration model to strengthen young people's mental health development which comprises: 1) maximising young people's emotional investment (engagement); 2) developing young people's mental health self-management skills (empowerment); and, 3) integrating mental health education and support programs into existing community and school structures and resources (integration).
澳大利亚农村和地区社区的特点是地理位置偏远,且经常发生干旱、丛林大火和洪水等日益频繁和严重的自然灾害。这些情况给居民的心理健康带来压力,并危及青少年的心理健康和情感发展。这些社区的专业心理健康护理往往不一致且不协调。虽然大量研究探讨了年轻人在这些社区中的心理健康障碍和寻求帮助的行为,但缺乏研究探讨农村和地区的青少年认为哪些因素有利于他们的心理健康,以及在需要时寻求帮助。本研究旨在深入了解这些年轻人的心理健康体验和需求,了解哪些因素有助于他们寻求帮助,以及他们想要和发现有用的什么样的心理健康教育和支持。
我们在澳大利亚新南威尔士州 11 个受干旱影响的农村和地区社区进行了一项定性研究。与 42 名 9 年级和 10 年级高中生、14 名高中工作人员和 2 名家长进行了 17 次半结构化(14 组;3 个人)访谈,探讨参与者对地理位置隔离和自然灾害如何影响他们的心理健康的体验。我们进一步探讨了参与者对当地可用心理健康支持资源的理解和需求,以及他们对精神疾病、污名和寻求帮助的看法和经验。
主题分析突出表明,从参与者的角度来看,年轻人的心理健康和寻求帮助的需求最好通过协调一致的多管齐下的社区方法来实现,该方法包括提供当地可用的、免费的、引人入胜的和赋权的心理健康教育和支持服务。参与者还强调需要将教师、家长和学校咨询服务等年轻人现有的心理健康支持者纳入这样的社区方法中,认识到他们的优势、局限性以及自身的教育和支持需求。
我们提出了一个三维的参与、赋权、整合模型,以加强年轻人的心理健康发展,该模型包括:1)最大限度地提高年轻人的情感投入(参与);2)培养年轻人的心理健康自我管理技能(赋权);3)将心理健康教育和支持计划整合到现有的社区和学校结构和资源中(整合)。