Barney D D
School of Social Welfare, University of Kansas, Lawrence 66045.
Am Indian Alsk Nativ Ment Health Res (1987). 1994;5(3):1-14. doi: 10.5820/aian.0503.1994.1.
American Indian and Alaska Native elders are an important at-risk population in need of mental health services, yet little is known about the factors that influence Indian/Native elders to actually seek mental health services. This study uses the Anderson and Newman conceptual framework to identify need as well as enabling and predisposing factors for mental health service use in a national sample of reservation and urban American Indian and Alaska Native elders. Results indicate that self-perceived need is the strongest predictor of mental health service use for elders living on reservations. However, for Indian/Native elders in urban areas, degree of mental impairment is most likely to predict use of mental health services. For both groups of elders, enabling variables, such as total income, level of education and access to medical insurance, were the least important in influencing whether or not an elder elected to use mental health services.
美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民老年人是亟需心理健康服务的重要高危人群,但对于影响印第安/原住民老年人实际寻求心理健康服务的因素却知之甚少。本研究采用安德森和纽曼的概念框架,在全国范围内抽取保留地及城市地区的美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民老年人样本,以确定其心理健康服务需求以及促成和诱发使用心理健康服务的因素。结果表明,自我认知需求是保留地居住的老年人使用心理健康服务的最强预测因素。然而,对于城市地区的印第安/原住民老年人来说,精神损害程度最有可能预测心理健康服务的使用情况。对于这两组老年人而言,促成变量,如总收入、教育水平和医疗保险的可及性,在影响老年人是否选择使用心理健康服务方面是最不重要的因素。