Pathways from Mental Health Literacy to Help‐Seeking in Rural Communities: A Mediation Analysis of Attitudes and Patient Activation Following Community Education in Obudu LGA


Authors : Akomaye Celsus Ufawu

Volume/Issue : Volume 10 - 2025, Issue 9 - September


Google Scholar : https://tinyurl.com/fez62x9s

Scribd : https://tinyurl.com/4tx5rr26

DOI : https://doi.org/10.38124/ijisrt/25sep153

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Abstract : Background: Rural mental health systems face demand–supply gaps and persistent stigma, thereby impeding timely use of care; community‐based education is advanced to improve literacy and behaviour.  Methods: A quasi‐experimental pretest–posttest evaluation contrasted an intervention with a comparison community in Obudu LGA. Literacy (causal beliefs, awareness), attitudes/stigma (social acceptance), activation (PAM), and behaviour (preferred help source, help‐seeking history) were measured. A parallel–serial mediation plan specified attitudes as a proximal mediator and activation as a distal mediator between literacy and help‐seeking, with bias‐corrected bootstrap confidence intervals and covariate adjustment.  Results: In the intervention arm, biological attribution increased from 7.45% to 32.29%, stress/trauma reached 31.25%, and supernatural attribution declined to 14.58%. Preferred help source re‐routed from traditional/religious providers to clinics/hospitals (χ2 = 39.58, p < 0.0001); help‐seeking history also shifted (χ2 = 11.65, p = 0.0029). Activation (PAM) did not increase significantly, suggesting a lagged mediator.  Conclusions: Findings support an attitude‐mediated pathway from literacy to help‐seeking, with activation likely to emerge after reinforcement; programme design should therefore centre stigma‐reducing, acceptance‐building components while adding booster contacts to cultivate activation.

Keywords : Mental Health Literacy; Attitudes; Stigma; Patient Activation; Help‐Seeking; Rural Nigeria; Mediation Analysis.

References :

  1. Barnett, M. L., Gonzalez, A., Miranda, J., Chavira, D. A., & Lau, A. S. (2018). Mobilising community health workers to address mental health disparities for underserved populations: A systematic review. Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research, 45(2), 195–211. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10488-017-0815-0
  2. Burns, J. K., & Tomita, A. (2015). Traditional and religious healers in the pathway to care for people with mental disorders in Africa: A systematic review and meta‑analysis. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 50(6), 867–877. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00127-014-0989-7
  3. Castillo, E. G., Ijadi‑Maghsoodi, R., Shadravan, S., Moore, E., Mensah, M. O. III, Docherty, M., Aguilera Nunez, M. G., Barcelo, N., Goodsmith, N., Halpin, L. E., Morton, I., Mango, J., Montero, A. E., Rahmanian Koushkaki, S., Bromley, E., Chung, B., Jones, F., Gabrielian, S., Gelberg, L., Greenberg, J. M., Kalofonos, I., Kataoka, S. H., Miranda, J., Pincus, H. A., Zima, B. T., & Wells, K. B. (2019). Community interventions to promote mental health and social equity. Current Psychiatry Reports, 21(5), 35. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11920-019-1017-0
  4. Corrigan, P. W., Druss, B. G., & Perlick, D. A. (2014). The impact of mental illness stigma on seeking and participating in mental health care. Psychological Science in the Public Interest, 15(2), 37–70. https://doi.org/10.1177/1529100614531398
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Background: Rural mental health systems face demand–supply gaps and persistent stigma, thereby impeding timely use of care; community‐based education is advanced to improve literacy and behaviour.  Methods: A quasi‐experimental pretest–posttest evaluation contrasted an intervention with a comparison community in Obudu LGA. Literacy (causal beliefs, awareness), attitudes/stigma (social acceptance), activation (PAM), and behaviour (preferred help source, help‐seeking history) were measured. A parallel–serial mediation plan specified attitudes as a proximal mediator and activation as a distal mediator between literacy and help‐seeking, with bias‐corrected bootstrap confidence intervals and covariate adjustment.  Results: In the intervention arm, biological attribution increased from 7.45% to 32.29%, stress/trauma reached 31.25%, and supernatural attribution declined to 14.58%. Preferred help source re‐routed from traditional/religious providers to clinics/hospitals (χ2 = 39.58, p < 0.0001); help‐seeking history also shifted (χ2 = 11.65, p = 0.0029). Activation (PAM) did not increase significantly, suggesting a lagged mediator.  Conclusions: Findings support an attitude‐mediated pathway from literacy to help‐seeking, with activation likely to emerge after reinforcement; programme design should therefore centre stigma‐reducing, acceptance‐building components while adding booster contacts to cultivate activation.

Keywords : Mental Health Literacy; Attitudes; Stigma; Patient Activation; Help‐Seeking; Rural Nigeria; Mediation Analysis.

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Paper Submission Last Date
31 - December - 2025

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