23 1 GENERAL INTRODUCTION health treatment seeking among active-duty army personnel. Military Psychology. 2013;25(5):514-35. 55. Fikretoglu D, Guay S, Pedlar D, Brunet A. Twelve month use of mental health services in a nationally representative, active military sample. Medical care. 2008:217-23. 56. Brown MC, Creel AH, Engel CC, Herrell RK, Hoge CW. Factors associated with interest in receiving help for mental health problems in combat veterans returning from deployment to Iraq. The Journal of nervous and mental disease. 2011;199(10):797-801. 57. Hom MA, Stanley IH, Schneider ME, Joiner Jr TE. A systematic review of help-seeking and mental health service utilization among military service members. Clinical psychology review. 2017;53:59-78. 58. Hoge CW, Castro CA, Messer SC, McGurk D, Cotting DI, Koffman RL. Combat duty in Iraq and Afghanistan, mental health problems, and barriers to care. New England journal of medicine. 2004;351(1):13-22. 59. Momen N, Strychacz CP, Viirre E. Perceived stigma and barriers to mental health care in marines attending the combat operational stress control program. Military medicine. 2012;177(10):1143-8. 60. Stecker T, Shiner B, Watts BV, Jones M, Conner KR. Treatment-seeking barriers for veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts who screen positive for PTSD. Psychiatric Services. 2013;64(3):280-3. 61. Valenstein M, Gorman L, Blow AJ, Ganoczy D, Walters H, Kees M, et al. Reported barriers to mental health care in three samples of US Army National Guard soldiers at three time points. Journal of Traumatic Stress. 2014;27(4):406-14. 62. Zinzow HM, Britt TW, Pury CL, Jennings K, Cheung JH, Raymond MA. Barriers and facilitators of mental health treatment‐seeking in US Active duty soldiers with sexual assault histories. Journal of Traumatic Stress. 2015;28(4):289-97. 63. Warner CH, Appenzeller GN, Mullen K, Warner CM, Grieger T. Soldier attitudes toward mental health screening and seeking care upon return from combat. Military medicine. 2008;173(6):563-9. 64. Britt TW, Wright KM, Moore D. Leadership as a predictor of stigma and practical barriers toward receiving mental health treatment: a multilevel approach. Psychological services. 2012;9(1):26. 65. Ajzen I. From intentions to actions: A theory of planned behavior. Action control: Springer; 1985. p. 11-39. 66. Godin G, Kok G. The theory of planned behavior: a review of its applications to health-related behaviors. American journal of health promotion. 1996;11(2):87-98. 67. Engelhardt EC, Bicknell G, Oliver M, Flaherty C, Line K, King E. Theory of Planned Behavior and Active Duty Air Force Members’ Mental Health Help-Seeking. Military Medicine. 2022. 68. Adams C, Gringart E, Strobel N. Explaining adults’ mental health help-seeking through the lens of the theory of planned behavior: a scoping review. Systematic reviews. 2022;11(1):1-16. 69. Cuyler M, Guerrero L. Mental health help-seeking intentions and organizational climate among military members. Military Psychology. 2019;31(4):315-25. 70. Siegel S, Dors S, Brants L, Schuy K, Rau H. Understanding health care avoidance and initial help-seeking behavior in German veterans: a theory of planned behavior. Psychology Research and Behavior Management. 2018;11:243. 71. Brouwers E, Joosen M, Van Zelst C, Van Weeghel J. To disclose or not to disclose: a multi-stakeholder focus group study on mental health issues in the work environment. Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation. 2020;30(1):8492. 72. Rüsch N, Corrigan PW, Waldmann T, Staiger T, Bahemann A, Oexle N, et al. Attitudes toward disclosing a mental health problem and reemployment: a longitudinal study. The Journal of nervous and mental disease. 2018;206(5):383-5. 73. Rüsch N, Rose C, Holzhausen F, Mulfinger N, Krumm S, Corrigan PW, et al. Attitudes towards disclosing a mental illness among German soldiers and their comrades. Psychiatry research. 2017;258:200-6. 74. Sterkens P, Baert S, Rooman C, Derous E. Why making promotion after a burnout is like boiling the ocean. 2021. 75. van Beukering IE, Bakker M, Corrigan PW, Gürbüz S, Bogaers RI, Janssens KME, et al. Expectations of Mental Illness Disclosure Outcomes in the Work Context: A Cross-Sectional Study Among Dutch Workers. Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation. 2022. 76. Wilson SR, Hintz EA, MacDermid Wadsworth SM, Topp DB, Southwell KH, Spoont M. Female US military veterans’(non) disclosure of mental health issues with family and friends: Privacy rules and boundary management. Health Communication. 2021;36(4):412-23. 77. Toth KE, Dewa CS. Employee decision-making about disclosure of a mental disorder at work. Journal of occupational rehabilitation. 2014;24(4):732-46. 78. Stratton E, Einboden R, Ryan R, Choi I, Harvey SB, Glozier N. Deciding to Disclose a Mental Health Condition in Male Dominated Workplaces; a Focus-Group Study. Frontiers in psychiatry. 2018;9. 79. Dewa CS, Van Weeghel J, Joosen MC, Brouwers EP. What could influence workers’ decisions to disclose a mental illness at work? The international journal of occupational and environmental medicine. 2020;11(3):119. 80. Hastuti R, Timming AR. An inter-disciplinary review of the literature on mental illness disclosure in the workplace: implications for human resource management. The International Journal of Human Resource Management. 2021:1-37. 81. Brohan E, Evans-Lacko S, Henderson C, Murray J, Slade M, Thornicroft G. Disclosure of a mental health problem in the employment context: qualitative study of beliefs and experiences. Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences.
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MjY0ODMw