Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association, Ahead of Print.
BACKGROUND:Urban, ethnically/racially diverse, impoverished men are predisposed to experience unaddressed depression and anxiety. The overlap of these factors creates significant mental health inequity.AIMS:This study sought to capture men’s impressions of the factors that contributed to their experience of depression and anxiety as well as barriers that they experienced in pursuing intervention.METHODS:Using community-based participatory research, in the context of long-term partnerships between a department of nursing and three urban, racially/ethnically diverse, and impoverished neighborhoods, the researchers recruited 50 men ages 23–83 years. Data were collected via six homogeneous, Zoom-based focus groups composed of Black, Hispanic, and White men, respectively.RESULTS:The men identified multiple themes pertaining to modifiable and non-modifiable contributing factors that played a role in their development of depression and anxiety as well as barriers related to stigma, resource issues, and a lack of knowledge of mental illness that they faced when seeking intervention.CONCLUSIONS:Understanding men’s perspectives on the contributing factors and barriers to mental health intervention can provide an evidence base with which to address mental health inequity via tailored care, policy, and research agendas.