Why Lower Income Mothers Do Not Engage With the Formal Mental Health Care System: Perceived Barriers to Care
- 1 September 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Qualitative Health Research
- Vol. 16 (7) , 926-943
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1049732306289224
Abstract
Lower income mothers who bring their children for mental health services also have high rates of depression and anxiety, yet few seek help. Maternal and child mental health are intimately intertwined; thus, the distress of both is likely to continue if the mother's needs are unaddressed. Because mothers overcome numerous instrumental challenges to help their children, the authors identify potential perceptual barriers to mothers' help seeking. An ethnographic analysis of in-depth qualitative interviews with 127 distressed mothers suggests several critical perceptual factors. For example, mothers attributed their distress to external causes (e.g., poverty, negative life stressors), which they believed individually focused mental health services could not affect. Interviewees also anticipated negative ramifications for seeking care, including being labeled unfit mothers, and thus potentially losing custody of their children. The authors discuss the implications of these and other key themes for engaging lower income mothers and their children.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Depression and Anxiety Among Mothers Who Bring Their Children to a Pediatric Mental Health ClinicPsychiatric Services, 2005
- Screening for Depression in Mothers Bringing Their Offspring for Evaluation or Treatment of DepressionAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 2000
- Datapoints: Managed Care and Unmet Need for Mental Health and Substance Abuse Care in 1998Psychiatric Services, 2000
- Risk for psychopathology in the children of depressed mothers: A developmental model for understanding mechanisms of transmission.Psychological Review, 1999
- Parents' Socioemotional Investment in ChildrenJournal of Marriage and Family, 1997
- Attrition in the treatment of childhood anxiety disorders.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1997
- Single mothers, poverty and depressionPsychological Medicine, 1997
- Parental psychiatric disorder: clinical prevalence and effects on default from treatmentChild: Care, Health and Development, 1994
- Maternal Depression and Child DevelopmentJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 1994
- Children of depressed parents: An integrative review.Psychological Bulletin, 1990