2013
DOI: 10.1007/s12310-013-9108-2
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Differences in School-Based Referrals for Mental Health Care: Understanding Racial/Ethnic Disparities Between Asian American and Latino Youth

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Cited by 73 publications
(54 citation statements)
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References 56 publications
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“…B. Lee, Han, Huh, Kim, & Kim, 2014; Ngo, Gibbons, Scire, & Le, 2014). Four studies focused on adolescents’ mental health service use (e.g., school-based mental health service use; Anyon et al, 2014; Bear et al, 2014; Brice et al, 2014; S. Guo et al, 2014), and the other studies focused on the service use of adults in different periods of adulthood ( n = 7; e.g., J.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…B. Lee, Han, Huh, Kim, & Kim, 2014; Ngo, Gibbons, Scire, & Le, 2014). Four studies focused on adolescents’ mental health service use (e.g., school-based mental health service use; Anyon et al, 2014; Bear et al, 2014; Brice et al, 2014; S. Guo et al, 2014), and the other studies focused on the service use of adults in different periods of adulthood ( n = 7; e.g., J.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nguyen & Bornheimer, 2014); or they studied the extent of mental health service utilization among a specific Asian American ethnic group (H. B. Lee, Han, Huh, Kim, & Kim, 2014;Ngo, Gibbons, Scire, & Le, 2014). Four studies focused on adolescents' mental health service use (e.g., school-based mental health service use; Anyon et al, 2014;Bear et al, 2014;Brice et al, 2014;, and the other studies focused on the service use of adults in different periods of adulthood (n = 7; e.g., J. E. . All studies used cross-sectional designs and quantitative methods (e.g., analysis of variance, multiple regression, and logistic regression).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several treatment barriers for Latino youth include cultural variations in problem recognition, attitudes towards mental health services, socioeconomic factors, lack of appropriate services (Cauce et al 2002), concerns about stigma (Merikangas et al 2011), and language issues (Garcia and Duckett 2009; Yeh et al 2003). Even in schools that offer on-site services, Latino youth, compared to non-Latino Whites, are still less likely to obtain treatment (Bear et al 2014; Guo et al 2014; Kim et al 2015). Other more accessible and less-stigmatized locations for providing treatment include primary care settings (Kelleher and Stevens 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%