A recent study found that men who more strongly endorse traditional masculine norms experience higher stress and are less likely to seek mental health help, emphasizing the need to address gender-specific barriers and promote positive masculine traits.
Not a demographer much less an American but comparing to the general US populations white is slightly overrepresented (population is 60%), 85% heteros actually checks out if people are identifying correctly, that is, no bi erasure, otherwise heteros are under-represented, 41% college degree is low, 61.28% have an associate degree or higher. Still that doesn’t say anything about how much you earn, squinting at it the biases aren’t strong enough to discount the results.
If anything the issue is 326 participants on top of that online.
…that’s a very mixed bag, toxicity-wise.
Duh because the symptom descriptions in the DSM-V are female-centric. Same stuff in men first gets undiagnosed because it surfaces as frustration, not lethargy, then at some point you get a burnout diagnosis. Well, either that or you take up farming or something.
Self-reliance is the key thing to address here, I think, the rest I estimate to be correlation, not causation. And it needs to be addressed properly, because it’s the one that hivemind doesn’t really get: No it’s not a bad thing. Also, no, you don’t need to be the undisputed master of the universe. It’s also the part where even otherwise progressive women promote toxic masculinity to a significant degree, you all know the “I opened up once about my problems and I’m never going to do that again” type of stories. I can’t even fathom how much would change if the default reaction instead was “Don’t know what to do? Call a male friend of his to take him fishing”. In the meantime, let’s be self-reliant and take people fishing without their SOs calling.
Yes! Apes together strong. Tough challenge, though, with the current degree of alienation and, especially in the US, rugged individualism. OTOH we don’t need no psychologists or access to therapy to frame things like that.
I don’t think the “US sucks at the availability of theory” angle is wrong, as such, it’s definitely a huge factor – but it’s probably also not the most efficient leverage point to change the system. That’s always the issue with reductive analysis: You might spot a real issue, a very core issue indeed, but the solution often doesn’t lie with the core issue but among factors which enable it. In this case, voter’s attitude to availability of care would certainly change if “that’s for losers, also, fuck you got mine” wasn’t as predominant a social force.
Great points and I agree. The tiny non-representative sample, which I missed so thanks, should make it difficult even to use this for framing the hypothesis of a proper study.
I still suspect that cost is a major barrier in seeking care. Until we address that, it won’t matter what we do about the other factors.