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Journal Article

Citation

Leshem B, Haj-Yahia MM, Guterman NB. Child. Youth Serv. Rev. 2015; 49: 1-10.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.childyouth.2014.12.022

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVE
This study examines patterns of and barriers for help seeking after exposure to community violence (ECV) among Palestinian adolescents from the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

METHOD
Self-administrated questionnaires were filled-out by a sample of 1930 Palestinian Junior and High school students. Participants reported on their ECV, choice of help agent, barriers for help seeking, perceived help experience, and sociodemographic factors.

RESULTS
Informal help agents were the first choice of 48% of both male and female adolescents, 30% of the boys and 20% of the girls sought formal help, and 1.9% of the participants sought only formal help. Positive help experience was best attributed to listening and giving advice, while confronting the help seeker led to the most adverse experience. Seeking help from multiple sources produced better help experience. The common reason for not seeking help by girls was feeling that talking wouldn't help. Boys did not seek help out of fear of disclosure and feeling that the problem would go away on its own.

CONCLUSIONS
Palestinian adolescents' help seeking patterns tend to confirm with those found in other populations. Study limitations and practical implications are discussed, and future studies are suggested.

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