Engaging Pacific Islander Perspectives on Mental Illness and Mental Health Services
- Conditions
- Mental Disorder
- Interventions
- Other: Citizens' panels
- Registration Number
- NCT03236766
- Lead Sponsor
- University of California, Riverside
- Brief Summary
This study will enroll 100 Samoan and 100 Marshallese adults to discuss mental health, mental disorders, and approaches for engaging Pacific Islander adults with mental illness into mental health services.
- Detailed Description
Despite enduring high mental health burden, Pacific Islanders have received minimal research or clinical attention in the US. Due to our poor understanding of the issues surrounding Pacific Islander mental health, engaging Pacific Islanders in mental health services has been very difficult.
This study draws from the Cultural Determinants of Help-Seeking Model to address this research and clinical gap by conducting focus groups and citizens' panels to obtain public input from 50 Samoans in LAC and 50 Marshallese in Arkansas on their unique mental health perspectives, needs, barriers and facilitators to services, and strategies to overcome these barriers. The citizens' panels will bring together lay public members, present multiple viewpoints about various mental health issues, and have members deliberate and reach a collective decision on these issues. All group materials will be translated into English, Samoan, and Marshallese, and interpreters will be present during the sessions. The groups will be audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed by the Research Team for themes. Numerical data will also be collected about levels of public awareness about mental illness, mental health stigma, acculturation, and underutilization of mental health services from 100 Samoan and 100 Marshallese community members to better understand these possible service barriers.
Analyzed data will be used to develop a set of intervention components that are likely to increase service engagement among both Samoans and Marshallese. These components will provide the foundation for a universal service engagement intervention for Pacific Islanders that will be developed and tested in future research.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- WITHDRAWN
- Sex
- Male
- Target Recruitment
- Not specified
- Samoan or Marshallese heritage; living in Los Angeles County or Northwest Arkansas; age 18 years or older; English, Samoan, or Marshallese oral and reading fluency
- Not of Samoan or Marshallese heritage; living outside the catchment areas; younger than 18 years; not fluent in English, Samoan, or Marshallese
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description No intervention Citizens' panels -
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Number of participants participating in study Up to 20 months There is no primary quantitative outcome beyond increased knowledge of Pacific Islander mental health beliefs and treatment preferences
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method