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The Paradox of the Resident Experiencing Depression: Higher Depression, Less Favorable Help-Seeking Outcome Expectations, and Lower Help-Seeking Intentions

Jason T. Siegel, Brendon Ellis, Gabrielle Riazi, Anne Brafford,Gregory Guldner, Jessica C. Wells

Social science & medicine(2024)

Cited 0|Views6
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Abstract
BACKGROUND:Medical residents experiencing depression can cause life-threatening harm to themselves and their patients. Treatment is available, but many do not seek help.METHODS:The current set of three studies investigated whether depressive symptomatology in and of itself served as a help-seeking barrier-and whether expectations of help-seeking benefits provided insight into why this occurred. Nine waves of cross-sectional data were collected from medical residents across several different hospitals in the United States.RESULTS:There was a large negative association between levels of depressive symptomatology and help-seeking intentions (H1) in Studies 1 and 3. In Study 2, this association was significant for one of the two help-seeking measures. For all analyses, studies, and measures, there was a large negative association between residents' levels of depressive symptomatology and agreement that seeking help will lead to positive outcomes (H2). Likewise, there was a moderately large indirect effect for all analyses, studies, and measures such that the association between levels of depressive symptomatology and help-seeking intentions occurred through less favorable expectations of help-seeking benefits (H3). Lower agreement of the benefits associated with help-seeking explained between 43 and 65% of depressive symptomatology's negative association with help-seeking intentions across studies.CONCLUSIONS:The current findings indicate that depressive symptomatology itself represents a help-seeking barrier and underscore the importance of help-seeking expectations in explaining why this occurs. If future studies reveal a causal relationship between the perceived benefits of help-seeking and help-seeking intentions, then increasing such expectations could offer a potential path for increasing resident help-seeking.
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Key words
Depression,Help -seeking,Help -seeking outcome expectations,Help -seeking intentions,Medical residents,Resident physicians
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