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Clinical Need, Perceived Need, and Treatment Use: Estimating Unmet Need for Mental Health Services in the Adult Population

Journal of Health and Social Behavior, Ahead of Print.
Estimates of unmet need for mental health services in the adult population are too high because many recover without treatment. Untreated recovery suggests that individuals accurately perceive professional help as unnecessary and do not pursue it. If so, perceived need for treatment should predict service use/nonuse more strongly than the presence or seriousness of disorder. With National Comorbidity Survey-Replication data, respondents who recovered from prior disorder by the current year (N = 1,054) were compared to currently unrecovered respondents with less serious (N = 999) and more serious disorders (N = 294). Perceived need covaried positively with the presence and seriousness of disorder and linked to far higher odds of treatment use than disorder seriousness, supporting perceptual accuracy. Two-thirds of respondents who perceived a treatment need obtained care; only one-third had unmet need. Need perceptions may better estimate a treatment gap and prompt research on individuals’ self-assessments and treatment decision-making.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 09/18/2022 | Link to this post on IFP |
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