Abstract: | The present study examined sociodemographic and attitudinal predisposing factors (gender, age, marital status, health insurance, household income, attitudes about mental health care), and need/illness variables (depression severity, physical and mental health functional status) as predictors of past-year mental health care use intensity (i.e., visit counts) and use/nonuse. The sample included 283 adult primary care patients from the Midwestern United States in a cross-sectional study. Nonlinear regression models demonstrated that past-year treatment use intensity was significantly associated with both married status and poorer physical health functioning, while the use (vs. nonuse) of treatment was associated with depression severity. A sociodemographic and attitudinal multivariate predictor model only explained 5% of the variance in treatment use intensity, but a need/illness model significantly contributed an additional 23% variance. Poorer physical health functioning was significant in predicting treatment use intensity, while depression severity was significant in predicting the use (vs. nonuse) of treatment. Results demonstrate the particular importance of physical health problems in determining the intensity of mental health care use, and depression severity in determining the use/nonuse of treatment, notwithstanding the restricted sociodemographic contour of the sample. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |