Gender differences in preferences for psychological treatment, coping strategies, and triggers to help‐seeking
Objective There is some evidence that men and women deal with stress in different ways; for example, a meta‐analysis found that women prefer to focus on emotions as a coping strategy more than men do. However, sex differences in preferences for therapy is a subject little explored. Design A cross‐se...
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Published in | British journal of clinical psychology Vol. 57; no. 1; pp. 42 - 58 |
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Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
England
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
01.03.2018
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Abstract | Objective
There is some evidence that men and women deal with stress in different ways; for example, a meta‐analysis found that women prefer to focus on emotions as a coping strategy more than men do. However, sex differences in preferences for therapy is a subject little explored.
Design
A cross‐sectional online survey.
Method
Participants (115 men and 232 women) were recruited via relevant websites and social media. The survey described therapies and asked participants how much they liked each. Their coping strategies and help‐seeking behaviour were assessed too.
Results
Survey data were analysed using multiple linear regression. After familywise adjustment of the alpha for multiple testing to p < .0125, and controlling for other relevant variables, men liked support groups more than women did (β = −.163, p < .010), used sex or pornography to cope with stress more than women did (Exp[B] = .280, p < .0002), and thought that there is a lack of male‐friendly options more than women did (Exp[B] = .264, p < .002). The majority of participants expressed no preference for the sex of their therapist, but of those who did, men were only slightly more likely to prefer a female therapist whereas women were much more likely to prefer females (p < .0004). Even after familywise adjustment, there were still more significant findings than would be expected by chance (p < .001, two‐tailed).
Conclusions
Although there are many similarities in the preferences of men and women regarding therapy, our findings support the hypothesis that men and women show statistically significant differences of relevance to clinical psychologists.
Practitioner points
Men are less inclined than women to seek help for psychological issues
This study demonstrates that men and women show significant differences in some aspects of therapy, coping behaviour, and help‐seeking
It is possible that men would be more inclined to seek help if therapies catered more for men's preferences
Practitioners can learn to improve the success of their practice by taking the gender of clients into account |
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AbstractList | ObjectiveThere is some evidence that men and women deal with stress in different ways; for example, a meta‐analysis found that women prefer to focus on emotions as a coping strategy more than men do. However, sex differences in preferences for therapy is a subject little explored.DesignA cross‐sectional online survey.MethodParticipants (115 men and 232 women) were recruited via relevant websites and social media. The survey described therapies and asked participants how much they liked each. Their coping strategies and help‐seeking behaviour were assessed too.ResultsSurvey data were analysed using multiple linear regression. After familywise adjustment of the alpha for multiple testing to p < .0125, and controlling for other relevant variables, men liked support groups more than women did (β = −.163, p < .010), used sex or pornography to cope with stress more than women did (Exp[B] = .280, p < .0002), and thought that there is a lack of male‐friendly options more than women did (Exp[B] = .264, p < .002). The majority of participants expressed no preference for the sex of their therapist, but of those who did, men were only slightly more likely to prefer a female therapist whereas women were much more likely to prefer females (p < .0004). Even after familywise adjustment, there were still more significant findings than would be expected by chance (p < .001, two‐tailed).ConclusionsAlthough there are many similarities in the preferences of men and women regarding therapy, our findings support the hypothesis that men and women show statistically significant differences of relevance to clinical psychologists.Practitioner pointsMen are less inclined than women to seek help for psychological issuesThis study demonstrates that men and women show significant differences in some aspects of therapy, coping behaviour, and help‐seekingIt is possible that men would be more inclined to seek help if therapies catered more for men's preferencesPractitioners can learn to improve the success of their practice by taking the gender of clients into account There is some evidence that men and women deal with stress in different ways; for example, a meta-analysis found that women prefer to focus on emotions as a coping strategy more than men do. However, sex differences in preferences for therapy is a subject little explored. A cross-sectional online survey. Participants (115 men and 232 women) were recruited via relevant websites and social media. The survey described therapies and asked participants how much they liked each. Their coping strategies and help-seeking behaviour were assessed too. Survey data were analysed using multiple linear regression. After familywise adjustment of the alpha for multiple testing to p < .0125, and controlling for other relevant variables, men liked support groups more than women did (β = -.163, p < .010), used sex or pornography to cope with stress more than women did (Exp[B] = .280, p < .0002), and thought that there is a lack of male-friendly options more than women did (Exp[B] = .264, p < .002). The majority of participants expressed no preference for the sex of their therapist, but of those who did, men were only slightly more likely to prefer a female therapist whereas women were much more likely to prefer females (p < .0004). Even after familywise adjustment, there were still more significant findings than would be expected by chance (p < .001, two-tailed). Although there are many similarities in the preferences of men and women regarding therapy, our findings support the hypothesis that men and women show statistically significant differences of relevance to clinical psychologists. Men are less inclined than women to seek help for psychological issues This study demonstrates that men and women show significant differences in some aspects of therapy, coping behaviour, and help-seeking It is possible that men would be more inclined to seek help if therapies catered more for men's preferences Practitioners can learn to improve the success of their practice by taking the gender of clients into account. Objective There is some evidence that men and women deal with stress in different ways; for example, a meta‐analysis found that women prefer to focus on emotions as a coping strategy more than men do. However, sex differences in preferences for therapy is a subject little explored. Design A cross‐sectional online survey. Method Participants (115 men and 232 women) were recruited via relevant websites and social media. The survey described therapies and asked participants how much they liked each. Their coping strategies and help‐seeking behaviour were assessed too. Results Survey data were analysed using multiple linear regression. After familywise adjustment of the alpha for multiple testing to p < .0125, and controlling for other relevant variables, men liked support groups more than women did (β = −.163, p < .010), used sex or pornography to cope with stress more than women did (Exp[B] = .280, p < .0002), and thought that there is a lack of male‐friendly options more than women did (Exp[B] = .264, p < .002). The majority of participants expressed no preference for the sex of their therapist, but of those who did, men were only slightly more likely to prefer a female therapist whereas women were much more likely to prefer females (p < .0004). Even after familywise adjustment, there were still more significant findings than would be expected by chance (p < .001, two‐tailed). Conclusions Although there are many similarities in the preferences of men and women regarding therapy, our findings support the hypothesis that men and women show statistically significant differences of relevance to clinical psychologists. Practitioner points Men are less inclined than women to seek help for psychological issues This study demonstrates that men and women show significant differences in some aspects of therapy, coping behaviour, and help‐seeking It is possible that men would be more inclined to seek help if therapies catered more for men's preferences Practitioners can learn to improve the success of their practice by taking the gender of clients into account There is some evidence that men and women deal with stress in different ways; for example, a meta-analysis found that women prefer to focus on emotions as a coping strategy more than men do. However, sex differences in preferences for therapy is a subject little explored.OBJECTIVEThere is some evidence that men and women deal with stress in different ways; for example, a meta-analysis found that women prefer to focus on emotions as a coping strategy more than men do. However, sex differences in preferences for therapy is a subject little explored.A cross-sectional online survey.DESIGNA cross-sectional online survey.Participants (115 men and 232 women) were recruited via relevant websites and social media. The survey described therapies and asked participants how much they liked each. Their coping strategies and help-seeking behaviour were assessed too.METHODParticipants (115 men and 232 women) were recruited via relevant websites and social media. The survey described therapies and asked participants how much they liked each. Their coping strategies and help-seeking behaviour were assessed too.Survey data were analysed using multiple linear regression. After familywise adjustment of the alpha for multiple testing to p < .0125, and controlling for other relevant variables, men liked support groups more than women did (β = -.163, p < .010), used sex or pornography to cope with stress more than women did (Exp[B] = .280, p < .0002), and thought that there is a lack of male-friendly options more than women did (Exp[B] = .264, p < .002). The majority of participants expressed no preference for the sex of their therapist, but of those who did, men were only slightly more likely to prefer a female therapist whereas women were much more likely to prefer females (p < .0004). Even after familywise adjustment, there were still more significant findings than would be expected by chance (p < .001, two-tailed).RESULTSSurvey data were analysed using multiple linear regression. After familywise adjustment of the alpha for multiple testing to p < .0125, and controlling for other relevant variables, men liked support groups more than women did (β = -.163, p < .010), used sex or pornography to cope with stress more than women did (Exp[B] = .280, p < .0002), and thought that there is a lack of male-friendly options more than women did (Exp[B] = .264, p < .002). The majority of participants expressed no preference for the sex of their therapist, but of those who did, men were only slightly more likely to prefer a female therapist whereas women were much more likely to prefer females (p < .0004). Even after familywise adjustment, there were still more significant findings than would be expected by chance (p < .001, two-tailed).Although there are many similarities in the preferences of men and women regarding therapy, our findings support the hypothesis that men and women show statistically significant differences of relevance to clinical psychologists.CONCLUSIONSAlthough there are many similarities in the preferences of men and women regarding therapy, our findings support the hypothesis that men and women show statistically significant differences of relevance to clinical psychologists.Men are less inclined than women to seek help for psychological issues This study demonstrates that men and women show significant differences in some aspects of therapy, coping behaviour, and help-seeking It is possible that men would be more inclined to seek help if therapies catered more for men's preferences Practitioners can learn to improve the success of their practice by taking the gender of clients into account.PRACTITIONER POINTSMen are less inclined than women to seek help for psychological issues This study demonstrates that men and women show significant differences in some aspects of therapy, coping behaviour, and help-seeking It is possible that men would be more inclined to seek help if therapies catered more for men's preferences Practitioners can learn to improve the success of their practice by taking the gender of clients into account. |
Author | Kingerlee, Roger Barry, John A. Liddon, Louise |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Louise surname: Liddon fullname: Liddon, Louise organization: Northumbria University – sequence: 2 givenname: Roger surname: Kingerlee fullname: Kingerlee, Roger organization: Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust – sequence: 3 givenname: John A. orcidid: 0000-0002-8931-0333 surname: Barry fullname: Barry, John A. email: john.barry@ucl.ac.uk organization: University College London |
BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28691375$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
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ContentType | Journal Article |
Copyright | 2017 The British Psychological Society 2017 The British Psychological Society. Copyright © 2018 The British Psychological Society |
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Keywords | help-seeking gender mental health coping sex |
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There is some evidence that men and women deal with stress in different ways; for example, a meta‐analysis found that women prefer to focus on... There is some evidence that men and women deal with stress in different ways; for example, a meta-analysis found that women prefer to focus on emotions as a... ObjectiveThere is some evidence that men and women deal with stress in different ways; for example, a meta‐analysis found that women prefer to focus on... |
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SubjectTerms | Adaptation, Psychological - physiology Adjustment Adult Behavior modification Clinical psychologists Coping Coping strategies Cross-Sectional Studies Education, Distance - methods Emotions Female gender Gender differences Gender Identity Help seeking behavior help‐seeking Humans Male mental health Polls & surveys Pornography Psychological intervention Psychologists sex Sex differences Social media Stress management Support groups Surveys and Questionnaires Therapy Treatment preferences Websites Women |
Title | Gender differences in preferences for psychological treatment, coping strategies, and triggers to help‐seeking |
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