Determinants of early mental health help-seeking among women in Bangladesh: A nationally representative bootstrapped regression analysis
Tanvir Ahmed, Salma Tasnim Luthfa, Amatul Haque Chaahat, Masudur Rahman Kanchon, Azaz Bin Sharif, Lambert Zixin Li, Lambert Zixin Li

TL;DR
This study explores factors influencing early mental health help-seeking among Bangladeshi women, finding education, employment, and internet use are key determinants.
Contribution
The study introduces a nationally representative analysis of early mental health help-seeking behavior among Bangladeshi women using bootstrapped regression.
Findings
Only 20.8% of Bangladeshi women reported seeking help for mild to moderate anxiety and depression.
Education, employment, and internet use significantly increased the likelihood of help-seeking.
Smartphone use was associated with lower odds of seeking mental health support.
Abstract
Mental health is a critical public health concern, shaping emotional, psychological, and social well-being. Depression and anxiety are the most common and preventable mental disorders, can be significantly improved by early interventions and proper care. This study investigates help-seeking behavior at early stage (mild to moderate anxiety and depression) and its determinants among Bangladeshi women. Special focus is given to media exposure as a potential enabler of early support. We used Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey (BDHS) data 2022 and utilized bootstrapped fixed-effect logistic regression model to detect the determinants. Only 20.8% of the women in this study (Weighted N = 3181) reported seeking help at least once. Compared to women with no education, those with secondary or higher education were respectively 1.41 and 1.55 times more likely to seek help (95% CI = 1.07 –…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMaternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and Postpartum · Intergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Child and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development
