Abstract

BackgroundRural and remote Australians face a range of barriers to mental health care, potentially limiting the extent to which current services and support networks may provide assistance. This paper examines self-reported mental health problems and contacts during the last 12 months, and explores cross-sectional associations between potential facilitators/barriers and professional and non-professional help-seeking, while taking into account expected associations with socio-demographic and health-related factors.MethodsDuring the 3-year follow-up of the Australian Rural Mental Health Study (ARMHS) a self-report survey was completed by adult rural residents (N = 1,231; 61% female; 77% married; 22% remote location; mean age = 59 years), which examined socio-demographic characteristics, current health status factors, predicted service needs, self-reported professional and non-professional contacts for mental health problems in the last 12 months, other aspects of help-seeking, and perceived barriers.ResultsProfessional contacts for mental health problems were reported by 18% of the sample (including 14% reporting General Practitioner contacts), while non-professional contacts were reported by 16% (including 14% reporting discussions with family/friends). Perceived barriers to health care fell under the domains of structural (e.g., costs, distance), attitudinal (e.g., stigma concerns, confidentiality), and time commitments. Participants with 12-month mental health problems who reported their needs as met had the highest levels of service use. Hierarchical logistic regressions revealed a dose-response relationship between the level of predicted need and the likelihood of reporting professional and non-professional contacts, together with associations with socio-demographic characteristics (e.g., gender, relationships, and financial circumstances), suicidal ideation, and attitudinal factors, but not geographical remoteness.ConclusionsRates of self-reported mental health problems were consistent with baseline findings, including higher rural contact rates with General Practitioners. Structural barriers displayed mixed associations with help-seeking, while attitudinal barriers were consistently associated with lower service contacts. Developing appropriate interventions that address perceptions of mental illness and attitudes towards help-seeking is likely to be vital in optimising treatment access and mental health outcomes in rural areas.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12888-014-0249-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Rural and remote Australians face a range of barriers to mental health care, potentially limiting the extent to which current services and support networks may provide assistance

  • This paper explored cross-sectional associations between predicted service needs, perceived barriers, and professional and non-professional help-seeking by rural and remote residents in New South Wales (NSW), Australia

  • Previous research has shown that rural residents may have a preference for informal help-seeking and consider professional service use as a last resort [15]

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Summary

Introduction

Rural and remote Australians face a range of barriers to mental health care, potentially limiting the extent to which current services and support networks may provide assistance. In Australia, mental illness may occur at similar rates across geographical regions [3,4], rural areas generally witness considerably lower MH service use [5,6]. Previous research has found that even where MH services are available, people residing in rural areas display lower help-seeking [6,11]. This may be due to attitudes which value self-reliance and a preference for self-management of MH problems, as well as higher stigma in rural areas [11,12]. Confidentiality is an important issue, with rural residents expressing concerns that their personal information may be disclosed, or that other residents will see them attending healthcare services [16]

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