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Mental health literacy for anxiety disorders: how perceptions of symptom severity might relate to recognition of psychological distress

Daniel J. Paulus (Department of Psychology, University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA)
Lauren Page Wadsworth (Department of Psychology, University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston, MA, USA)
Sarah A. Hayes-Skelton (Department of Psychology, University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston, MA, USA)

Journal of Public Mental Health

ISSN: 1746-5729

Article publication date: 15 June 2015

736

Abstract

Purpose

Improving mental health literacy is an important consideration when promoting expedient and effective treatment seeking for psychological disorders. Low recognition serves as a barrier to treatment and the purpose of this paper is to examine recognition by lay individuals of severity for three psychological disorders: social anxiety, generalized anxiety, and major depression using a dimensional approach.

Design/methodology/approach

Vignettes of mild/subclinical, moderate, and severe cases of each disorder were rated for severity by a team of expert assessors and 270 participants (mean age=26.8; 76.7 percent women).

Findings

Difference ratings were calculated comparing participants’ responses to scores from the assessors. A within-groups factorial ANOVA with LSD follow-up was performed to examine the effects of Diagnosis and Severity on difference ratings. Both main effects (Diagnosis, F(2, 536)=35.26, Mse=1.24; Severity, F(2, 536)=9.44, Mse=1.93) and the interaction were significant (F(4, 1,072)=13.70, Mse=1.13) all p’s < 0.001. Social anxiety cases were under-rated in the mild/subclinical and moderate cases, generalized anxiety cases were under-rated at all three severities, and major depression cases were over-rated at all three severities.

Social implications

Judgments of severity may underlie the low recognition rates for social anxiety disorder and generalized anxiety disorder. Future efforts should focus on improved recognition and education regarding anxiety disorders in the population, particularly before they become severe.

Originality/value

This project demonstrates the importance of considering judgments of symptom severity on a continuum, and in a range of cases, rather than just the ability to correctly label symptoms, when determining whether or not people recognize psychological disorders.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Amandine Mallet for providing feedback on materials. The authors also thank Ashley Shirai and Shannon Sorenson from the assessment team for rating the vignettes. The authors report no conflicts of interest. This study was partially supported by a National Institute of Mental Health Grant (No. MH085060) awarded to the third author. The funding agency had no role in designing this study or in the decision to submit the results for publication.

Citation

Paulus, D.J., Wadsworth, L.P. and Hayes-Skelton, S.A. (2015), "Mental health literacy for anxiety disorders: how perceptions of symptom severity might relate to recognition of psychological distress", Journal of Public Mental Health, Vol. 14 No. 2, pp. 94-106. https://doi.org/10.1108/JPMH-09-2013-0064

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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