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Featured researches published by Kyaien O. Conner.


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2010

Mental Health Treatment Seeking Among Older Adults with Depression: The Impact of Stigma and Race

Kyaien O. Conner; Valire Carr Copeland; Nancy K. Grote; Gary F. Koeske; Daniel Rosen; Charles F. Reynolds; Charlotte Brown

OBJECTIVE Stigma associated with mental illness continues to be a significant barrier to help seeking, leading to negative attitudes about mental health treatment and deterring individuals who need services from seeking care. This study examined the impact of public stigma (negative attitudes held by the public) and internalized stigma (negative attitudes held by stigmatized individuals about themselves) on racial differences in treatment-seeking attitudes and behaviors among older adults with depression. METHOD Random digit dialing was utilized to identify a representative sample of 248 African American and white older adults (older than 60 years) with depression (symptoms assessed by the Patient Health Questionnaire-9). Telephone-based surveys were conducted to assess their treatment-seeking attitudes and behaviors and the factors that impacted these behaviors. RESULTS Depressed older adult participants endorsed a high level of public stigma and were not likely to be currently engaged in or did they intend to seek mental health treatment. Results also suggested that African American older adults were more likely to internalize stigma and endorsed less positive attitudes toward seeking mental health treatment than their white counterparts. Multiple regression analysis indicated that internalized stigma partially mediated the relationship between race and attitudes toward treatment. CONCLUSION Stigma associated with having a mental illness has a negative influence on attitudes and intentions toward seeking mental health services among older adults with depression, particularly African American elders. Interventions to target internalized stigma are needed to help engage this population in psychosocial mental health treatments.


Aging & Mental Health | 2010

Barriers to treatment and culturally endorsed coping strategies among depressed African-American older adults

Kyaien O. Conner; Valire Carr Copeland; Nancy K. Grote; Daniel Rosen; Steve Albert; Michelle L. McMurray; Charles F. Reynolds; Charlotte Brown; Gary F. Koeske

Objective: Older adults are particularly vulnerable to the effects of depression, however, they are less likely to seek and engage in mental health treatment. African-American older adults are even less likely than their White counterparts to seek and engage in mental health treatment. This qualitative study examined the experience of being depressed among African-American elders and their perceptions of barriers confronted when contemplating seeking mental health services. In addition, we examined how coping strategies are utilized by African-American elders who choose not to seek professional mental health services. Method: A total of 37 interviews were conducted with African-American elders endorsing at least mild symptoms of depression. Interviews were audiotaped and subsequently transcribed. Content analysis was utilized to analyze the qualitative data. Results: Thematic analysis of the interviews with African-American older adults is presented within three areas: (1) Beliefs about Depression Among Older African-Americans; (2) Barriers to Seeking Treatment for Older African-Americans; and (3) Cultural Coping Strategies for Depressed African-American Older Adults. Conclusion: Older African-Americans in this study identified a number of experiences living in the Black community that impacted their treatment seeking attitudes and behaviors, which led to identification and utilization of more culturally endorsed coping strategies to deal with their depression. Findings from this study provide a greater understanding of the stigma associated with having a mental illness and its influence on attitudes toward mental health services.


Journal of Social Work Practice in The Addictions | 2008

“You're Nothing But a Junkie”: Multiple Experiences of Stigma in an Aging Methadone Maintenance Population

Kyaien O. Conner; Daniel Rosen

ABSTRACT Whereas research has addressed the impact of mental illness stigma on treatment-seeking attitudes and behaviors, the effects of other stigmas such as age, race, drug addiction, and poverty have received far less attention. In addition, research has not sufficiently addressed the potential additive effect of stigma on individuals who are experiencing multiple stigmas simultaneously. In an attempt to explore the impact of experiencing multiple stigmas, this qualitative study examined the existence and experiences of stigma in a sample of older adult methadone maintenance clients. Semistructured interviews with 24 older adults in a methadone program were conducted and analyzed using an inductive content analysis approach. Results reveal 8 distinct stigmas experienced by this sample. Additionally, respondents who reported more stigmas were more likely to identify stigma as a barrier to substance abuse and mental health treatment. These findings reinforce the importance of recognizing the ways in which the burden of multiple stigmas impacts our most vulnerable populations. Implications for clinical practice and future research are discussed.


Journal of Gerontological Social Work | 2009

Racial differences in attitudes toward professional mental health treatment: the mediating effect of stigma.

Kyaien O. Conner; Gary F. Koeske; Charlotte Brown

Stigma associated with mental illness continues to be a pervasive barrier to mental health treatment, leading to negative attitudes about treatment and deterring appropriate care seeking. Empirical research suggests that the stigma of mental illness may exert an adverse influence on attitudes toward mental health treatment and service utilization patterns by individuals with a mental illness, particularly African Americans. However, little research has examined the impact of stigma on racial differences in attitudes toward seeking mental health treatment. This study examined the hypothesis that stigma partially mediates the relationship between race and attitudes towards mental health treatment in a community-based sample of 101 African American and White older adults. Multiple regression analyses and classic path analysis was utilized to test the partial mediation model. Controlling for socio-demographic factors, African American older adults were more likely to have negative attitudes toward mental health treatment, and they also reported more public and internalized stigma than their White counterparts. As hypothesized, the relationship between race and attitudes toward mental health treatment was partially mediated by internalized stigma, suggesting that internalized stigma may cause older adults to develop negative attitudes about mental health treatment. The partial mediation model was not significant for public stigma, however. Implications for social work research and practice are discussed.


Families in society-The journal of contemporary social services | 2008

Enhancing the Cultural Relevance of Empirically-Supported Mental Health Interventions.

Kyaien O. Conner; Nancy K. Grote

Evidence-based practice (EBP) has become a hot topic in clinical social work and other mental health disciplines. Mental health professionals have called attention to the need for clinical decision-making to be based on the best available empirically supported treatments integrated with client preferences, values, and circumstances. This movement has greatly stimulated mental health professionals to develop, test, and adopt efficacious treatments for clients with psychological problems, but what is missing in the literature is the cultural context in which these treatments must be implemented to be effective with racial/ethnic minority populations. Herein, we utilize the culturally centered framework of Bernal, Bonilla and Bellido (1995) to examine its utility in assessing to what extent empirically supported mental health treatments incorporate culturally relevant components.


Journal of Applied Gerontology | 2017

The Reduction of Public and Internalized Stigma in Late-Life Depression: A Pilot Study

Kyaien O. Conner; Rosalyn Roker; Chris J. Ward; Charlotte Brown

Innovative strategies are needed to reduce the impact of stigma as a barrier to mental health services for older adults living with a mental illness. The purpose of this brief report was to examine the impact of a 3-month peer educator (PE) intervention on stigma reduction in a sample of depressed older adults. PEs are individuals of similar age, and racial and socioeconomic backgrounds who have been previously treated for depression, and are trained to provide support and education to depressed individuals within their community. Participants (N = 21) aged 60 and older completed a demographic questionnaire, public stigma, and internalized stigma measures pre- and post-PE intervention. The results of paired samples t tests indicated that the use of PEs significantly reduced both public and internalized stigma among depressed older adults. PEs may be an effective strategy toward alleviating stigma and increasing mental health service utilization among older adults with depression.


Journal of Community Psychology | 2010

Depression stigma, race, and treatment seeking behavior and attitudes.

Charlotte Brown; Kyaien O. Conner; Valire Carr Copeland; Nancy K. Grote; Scott R. Beach; Deena R. Battista; Charles F. Reynolds


Journal of Aging Studies | 2010

Attitudes and beliefs about mental health among African American older adults suffering from depression

Kyaien O. Conner; Brenda E. Lee; Vanessa Mayers; Deborah Robinson; Charles F. Reynolds; Steve Albert; Charlotte Brown


Psychiatric Services | 2011

Differences in Treatment Attitudes Between Depressed African- American and Caucasian Veterans in Primary Care

John Kasckow; Erin Ingram; Charlotte Brown; James D. Tew; Kyaien O. Conner; Jennifer Q. Morse; Gretchen L. Haas; Charles F. Reynolds; David W. Oslin


Social Work in Public Health | 2007

Racial Differences in Mental Health Service Utilization Among Low-Income Women

Daniel Rosen; Richard M. Tolman; Lynn A. Warner; Kyaien O. Conner

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Daniel Rosen

University of Pittsburgh

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Nancy K. Grote

University of Washington

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Gary F. Koeske

University of Pittsburgh

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Steve Albert

University of Pittsburgh

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David W. Oslin

University of Pennsylvania

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