Abstract

Session presented on: Tuesday, July 23, 2013:

Purpose: Depression and anxiety are significant mental health issues in the United States today that tend to affect ethnically diverse, impoverished women disproportionately. These mental health issues create situations of significant burden particularly when access to care, and specifically culturally congruent care, is limited. In keeping with the newly identified Healthy People 2020 topic, the purpose of this study was to identify social determinants of mental health and barriers to help seeking in three urban, ethnically diverse, underserved, and impoverished neighborhoods.

Methods: Using the ideological perspective of community based participatory research and in the context of long-term partnerships between a department of nursing and these neighborhoods, the research team recruited sixty-one women aged 18 to 69 years. Data were collected via homogeneous focus groups comprised of Black, Hispanic, and White women respectively. The researchers conducted five of the focus groups in English and one in Spanish. The research team transcribed the focus group data and then analyzed it using NVivo9.

Results: The women identified saturated themes around economic, cultural, and neighborhood issues that they perceived to be determinants of their depression and anxiety. There were also significant themes around practical, psychosocial, and cultural barriers to their help seeking behavior.

Conclusion: The results of this study have significant potential to promote women's overall mental health by contributing to an understanding of the interrelationships between social factors and depression/anxiety as well as the barriers to help-seeking. As such, this research can make important contributions to nursing practice, client outcomes, and the science of nursing.

Author Details

Mary Molewyk-Doornbos, PhD; Joleen DeGroot, BSN, RN; Gail Landheer Zandee, MSN, RN

Sigma Membership

Unknown

Lead Author Affiliation

Calvin University, Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA

Type

Presentation

Format Type

Text-based Document

Study Design/Type

N/A

Research Approach

N/A

Keywords:

Women's Mental Health, Community-based Participatory Research, Social Determinants of Depression/Anxiety

Conference Name

24th International Nursing Research Congress

Conference Host

Sigma Theta Tau International

Conference Location

Prague, Czech Republic

Conference Year

2013

Rights Holder

All rights reserved by the author(s) and/or publisher(s) listed in this item record unless relinquished in whole or part by a rights notation or a Creative Commons License present in this item record.

All permission requests should be directed accordingly and not to the Sigma Repository.

All submitting authors or publishers have affirmed that when using material in their work where they do not own copyright, they have obtained permission of the copyright holder prior to submission and the rights holder has been acknowledged as necessary.

Acquisition

Proxy-submission

Share

COinS
 

Social determinants of women's mental health and barriers to help-seeking in three ethnically diverse, impoverished, and underserved communities

Prague, Czech Republic

Session presented on: Tuesday, July 23, 2013:

Purpose: Depression and anxiety are significant mental health issues in the United States today that tend to affect ethnically diverse, impoverished women disproportionately. These mental health issues create situations of significant burden particularly when access to care, and specifically culturally congruent care, is limited. In keeping with the newly identified Healthy People 2020 topic, the purpose of this study was to identify social determinants of mental health and barriers to help seeking in three urban, ethnically diverse, underserved, and impoverished neighborhoods.

Methods: Using the ideological perspective of community based participatory research and in the context of long-term partnerships between a department of nursing and these neighborhoods, the research team recruited sixty-one women aged 18 to 69 years. Data were collected via homogeneous focus groups comprised of Black, Hispanic, and White women respectively. The researchers conducted five of the focus groups in English and one in Spanish. The research team transcribed the focus group data and then analyzed it using NVivo9.

Results: The women identified saturated themes around economic, cultural, and neighborhood issues that they perceived to be determinants of their depression and anxiety. There were also significant themes around practical, psychosocial, and cultural barriers to their help seeking behavior.

Conclusion: The results of this study have significant potential to promote women's overall mental health by contributing to an understanding of the interrelationships between social factors and depression/anxiety as well as the barriers to help-seeking. As such, this research can make important contributions to nursing practice, client outcomes, and the science of nursing.