Abstract
The Mental Health Literacy framework (Jorm, 2000) describes the knowledge, attitudes and beliefs that people hold about mental health. It has not been explored before in England or using a qualitative design. In 2001, the established Somerset Health Panels discussed attitudes to stress, depression and help seeking. A contemporary secondary analysis of the data originally collected during these focus groups was undertaken to review the Mental Health Literacy framework's six component parts: ability to recognise specific disorders or different types of psychological distress, knowledge/beliefs about risk factors and causes, knowledge/beliefs about self-help interventions, knowledge/beliefs about professional help, attitudes which facilitate recognition/help seeking and knowledge of how to seek information. The results reveal that qualitative data added depth to what was known previously and provided a range of new insights into Mental Health Literacy. There are challenges about recognising symptoms as they ...
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