TY - JOUR
T1 - Perceived helpfulness of treatment for social anxiety disorder
T2 - findings from the WHO World Mental Health Surveys
AU - the WHO World Mental Health Survey Collaborators
AU - Bruffaerts, Ronny
AU - Harris, Meredith G.
AU - Kazdin, Alan E.
AU - Vigo, Daniel V.
AU - Sampson, Nancy A.
AU - Chiu, Wai Tat
AU - Al-Hamzawi, Ali
AU - Alonso, Jordi
AU - Altwaijri, Yasmin A.
AU - Andrade, Laura
AU - Benjet, Corina
AU - de Girolamo, Giovanni
AU - Florescu, Silvia
AU - Haro, Josep Maria
AU - Hu, Chi yi
AU - Karam, Aimee
AU - Karam, Elie G.
AU - Kovess-Masfety, Viviane
AU - Lee, Sing
AU - McGrath, John J.
AU - Navarro-Mateu, Fernando
AU - Nishi, Daisuke
AU - O’Neill, Siobhan
AU - Posada-Villa, José
AU - Scott, Kate M.
AU - Have, Margreet ten
AU - Torres, Yolanda
AU - Wojtyniak, Bogdan
AU - Xavier, Miguel
AU - Zarkov, Zahari
AU - Kessler, Ronald C.
AU - Aguilar-Gaxiola, Sergio
AU - Al-Kaisy, Mohammed Salih
AU - Andrade, Laura Helena
AU - Atwoli, Lukoye
AU - Borges, Guilherme
AU - Bromet, Evelyn J.
AU - Bunting, Brendan
AU - Caldas-de-Almeida, Jose Miguel
AU - Cardoso, Graça
AU - Chatterji, Somnath
AU - Cia, Alfredo H.
AU - Degenhardt, Louisa
AU - Demyttenaere, Koen
AU - Gureje, Oye
AU - Hinkov, Hristo
AU - de Jonge, Peter
AU - Karam, Aimee Nasser
AU - Kawakami, Norito
AU - Williams, David R.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany.
PY - 2022/10
Y1 - 2022/10
N2 - Purpose: To investigate the prevalence and predictors of perceived helpfulness of treatment in persons with a history of DSM-IV social anxiety disorder (SAD), using a worldwide population-based sample. Methods: The World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys is a coordinated series of community epidemiological surveys of non-institutionalized adults; 27 surveys in 24 countries (16 in high-income; 11 in low/middle-income countries; N = 117,856) included people with a lifetime history of treated SAD. Results: In respondents with lifetime SAD, approximately one in five ever obtained treatment. Among these (n = 1322), cumulative probability of receiving treatment they regarded as helpful after seeing up to seven professionals was 92.2%. However, only 30.2% persisted this long, resulting in 65.1% ever receiving treatment perceived as helpful. Perceiving treatment as helpful was more common in female respondents, those currently married, more highly educated, and treated in non-formal health-care settings. Persistence in seeking treatment for SAD was higher among those with shorter delays in seeking treatment, in those receiving medication from a mental health specialist, and those with more than two lifetime anxiety disorders. Conclusions: The vast majority of individuals with SAD do not receive any treatment. Among those who do, the probability that people treated for SAD obtain treatment they consider helpful increases considerably if they persisted in help-seeking after earlier unhelpful treatments.
AB - Purpose: To investigate the prevalence and predictors of perceived helpfulness of treatment in persons with a history of DSM-IV social anxiety disorder (SAD), using a worldwide population-based sample. Methods: The World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys is a coordinated series of community epidemiological surveys of non-institutionalized adults; 27 surveys in 24 countries (16 in high-income; 11 in low/middle-income countries; N = 117,856) included people with a lifetime history of treated SAD. Results: In respondents with lifetime SAD, approximately one in five ever obtained treatment. Among these (n = 1322), cumulative probability of receiving treatment they regarded as helpful after seeing up to seven professionals was 92.2%. However, only 30.2% persisted this long, resulting in 65.1% ever receiving treatment perceived as helpful. Perceiving treatment as helpful was more common in female respondents, those currently married, more highly educated, and treated in non-formal health-care settings. Persistence in seeking treatment for SAD was higher among those with shorter delays in seeking treatment, in those receiving medication from a mental health specialist, and those with more than two lifetime anxiety disorders. Conclusions: The vast majority of individuals with SAD do not receive any treatment. Among those who do, the probability that people treated for SAD obtain treatment they consider helpful increases considerably if they persisted in help-seeking after earlier unhelpful treatments.
KW - Perceived helpfulness
KW - Social anxiety disorder
KW - Treatment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85131362353&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00127-022-02249-3
DO - 10.1007/s00127-022-02249-3
M3 - Article
C2 - 35262761
AN - SCOPUS:85131362353
SN - 0933-7954
VL - 57
SP - 2079
EP - 2095
JO - Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology
JF - Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology
IS - 10
ER -