Theses and Dissertations
Issuing Body
Mississippi State University
Advisor
Winer, Eric Samuel
Committee Member
McKinney, Cliff
Committee Member
Nadorff, Michael R.
Committee Member
Veilleux, Jennifer C.
Date of Degree
8-10-2018
Document Type
Dissertation - Open Access
Major
Applied Psychology
Degree Name
Doctor of Philosophy
College
College of Arts and Sciences
Department
Department of Psychology
Abstract
The present study was aimed at experimentally investigating effects of causal explanations for depression on treatment-seeking behavior and beliefs. Participants at a large Southern university (N = 139; 78% female; average age 19.77) received bogus screening results indicating high depression risk, then viewed an explanation of depression etiology (fixed biological vs. malleable) before receiving a treatment referral (antidepressant vs. psychotherapy). Participants accepted the cover story at face value, but some expressed doubts about the screening task’s ability to properly assess their individual depression. Within the skeptics, those given a fixed biological explanation for depression were relatively unwilling to accept either treatment, but those given a malleable explanation were much more willing to accept psychotherapy. Importantly, differences in skepticism were not due to levels of actual depressive symptoms. The present findings indicate that information about the malleability of depression may have a protective effect for persons who otherwise would not accept treatment.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11668/20063
Recommended Citation
Salem, Taban, "An Experimental Investigation of Causal Explanations for Depression and Willingness to Accept Treatment" (2018). Theses and Dissertations. 549.
https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/td/549