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Does the theory of planned behavior predict intentions to seek help for suicidality

Posted on:2012-11-23Degree:Psy.DType:Dissertation
University:Marshall UniversityCandidate:Mills, Jennifer LynnFull Text:PDF
GTID:1459390011457166Subject:Health Sciences
Abstract/Summary:
The purpose of the current project is to relate disparate lines of research on suicide prevention and help-seeking using Azjen's (1991) Theory of Planned Behavior (TpB). Two studies examined college students' beliefs about help-seeking for emotional problems. In Study 1, 37 undergraduates responded to open-ended questions about a variety of help-seeking behaviors. These responses were categorized. Frequencies and percentages were calculated for each category. In Study 2, 143 undergraduates completed two mental health inventories and a TpB survey constructed by the experimenter. A model containing the three TpB predictor variables---attitudes (M = 15.29, SD = 3.57), perceived social norms (M = 12.38, SD = 3.69), and perceived behavioral control (M = 18.04, SD = 2.84)---predicted a statistically significant portion of the variance in participants' intentions to use campus mental health services, R2 = .60, F (9, 96) = 15.79, p <.001. Attitudes (beta= 0.75, t = 5.34, p <.001), perceived social norms (beta = 0.28, t = 2.16, p =.034), and perceived behavioral control (beta = 0.38, t = 2.58, p =.011) were strongly related to intentions to use campus mental health services even when causal factors previously identified in the literature were controlled for statistically. This research has implications for campus suicide prevention.
Keywords/Search Tags:Intentions
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