Receiving support for mental health problems from family and friends: Measurement and impact on mental health, relationships, and help-seeking
Amy J. Morgan, Judith Wright, Andrew J. Mackinnon, Nicola J. Reavley, Alyssia Rossetto, Long Khanh-Dao Le, Anthony F. Jorm, Ang Li, Ang Li

TL;DR
This study shows that receiving proper mental health support from loved ones can improve mental health, strengthen relationships, and encourage professional help-seeking.
Contribution
The study introduces a new self-report measure of mental health support and provides empirical evidence for its impact on outcomes.
Findings
Receiving recommended mental health first aid support was linked to improved mental health (r = .37).
Better support was associated with closer relationships (r = .39) and increased help-seeking from professionals (r = .49).
The Mental Health Support Scale demonstrated acceptable psychometric properties with two factors of recommended and not recommended actions.
Abstract
Mental health-related discrimination by friends, family members and intimate partners is especially common, particularly in the form of avoidance and dismissive reactions. In contrast, good quality initial support (mental health first aid) is thought to improve help-seeking and mental health outcomes, although there are few studies that have examined this. This study aimed to develop a measure of mental health support skills that could be self-reported by the recipient of help, and to use this measure to test whether better quality support was related to better outcomes. We recruited 1116 adults from Prolific who reported a recent mental health problem or crisis and were helped by someone close to them such as a family member or friend. Participants completed a recipient version of the Mental Health Support Scale, which asked about actions the other person took to support them, based on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health Treatment and Access · Family Caregiving in Mental Illness · Digital Mental Health Interventions
