Investigating institutional abuse survivors’ help-seeking attitudes with the Inventory of Attitudes towards Seeking Mental Health Services

ABSTRACT Background: Although effective treatments exist, many trauma survivors delay or avoid professional help. Attitudes towards help-seeking are associated with intentions to and actual treatment use, but were neglected in research on trauma survivors so far. Objective: This study aimed to investigate the reliability, construct validity, and predictive power of the Inventory of Attitudes towards Seeking Mental Health Services (IASMHS) and to investigate attitudes of adult institutional abuse survivors. Method: A total of 220 adult survivors of institutional abuse were interviewed using IASMHS, the PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 (PCL-5), the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire Short-Form (CTQ-SF), the Life Events Checklist (LEC-5), and the depression-subscale of the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI-18). They were further asked about their current mental health service use. We assessed the fit of different models of IASMHS with confirmatory factor analyses and predicted current mental health service use with a binominal logistic regression model. Results: The three-factor structure of IASMHS provided the best fit. One of the three scales (help-seeking propensity), the PTSD-intrusion scale, and the depression scale significantly contributed to the prediction of current mental health service use. Single items of the psychological openness scale loaded weakly on the according factor. Our sample showed a similar IASMHS profile compared to other samples with mental health problems. Conclusion: Overall, IASMHS appears to be a useful instrument to assess attitudes towards seeking mental health services in trauma survivors. It can be used to investigate help-seeking attitudes and its correlates to better understand and facilitate survivors’ treatment use.

• Institutional abuse survivors' current mental health service use was predicted by the helpseeking propensity scale of IASMHS, higher levels of PTSD intrusion, and lower levels of depression.
• Early post-trauma interventions should target trauma survivors' helpseeking propensity to facilitate mental health service use.

Introduction
Being exposed to or witnessing traumatic events such as natural or technical disasters, abuse, or violent attacks can lead to posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and can increase the risk for other mental disorders (Perkonigg, Kessler, Storz, & Wittchen, 2000). Moreover, untreated trauma related disorders can be persistent and may have adverse consequences on trauma survivors' individual lives, and on society according to socioeconomic costs. Although various effective trauma treatments exist (Kitchiner, Roberts, Wilcox, & Bisson, 2012;Van Etten & Taylor, 1998;Watts et al., 2013), the majority of individuals with trauma related mental disorders do not receive professional help (Kessler, 2000). This concerning mental health care situation requires a better understanding of the factors that are involved in mental health service use of trauma survivors. Mental health services typically comprise professional help from mental health specialists such as psychiatrists, psychologists, or psychotherapists Mackenzie, Erickson, Deane, & Wright, 2014).
Three key factors were identified to be strongly associated with mental health service use after traumatic events: higher levels of psychopathology, type and degree of the traumatic event, and female gender (Gavrilovic, Schützwohl, Fazel, & Priebe, 2005). To address the lack of knowledge towards reasons for mental health service use, Gavrilovic et al. (2005) emphasized a closer investigation of trauma survivors' attitudes towards services to better understand their mediating and moderating effects on seeking professional help. In general, positive and negative attitudes towards seeking mental health services influence intentions to seek professional help and actual health care use (Freitas-Murrell & Swift, 2015). A crosstemporal meta-analysis  showed that helpseeking attitudes changed in a disconcerting direction and became increasingly negative during the investigated period (Mackenzie et al., 2014). In a study on attitudes towards mental health service use in six European countries, ten Have et al. (2010) reported that one-third of participants believed professional care for mental health problems was equitable to no help or even worse. These findings show that more effort is needed to investigate attitudes towards mental health service use, with the goal to better understand, predict, and facilitate individuals' help-seeking for professional care.
1.1. Attitudes towards seeking mental health services Fishbein and Ajzen (1975) described that an individuals' intention to perform a certain behaviour is influenced by attitudes towards the behaviour and subjective norms (Theory of Reasoned Action). Their theory was later adapted in Ajzen's (1985) Theory of Planned Behaviour, according to the role of perceived behavioural control, as a further factor that influences intentions. Following the Theory of Planned Behaviour,  adapted Fischer and Turner`s (1970) Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help Scale by extending the measure with items regarding the knowledge of subjective norms and perceived behavioural control towards seeking professional help. The resulting Inventory of Attitudes towards Mental Health Services (IASMHS) is a 24-item scale which is increasingly used in research.
Prior studies demonstrated various interactions between attitudinal factors and demographic characteristics: being female (e.g. Mackenzie, Gekoski, & Knox, 2006;ten Have et al., 2010) and being Caucasian (Ward, Wiltshire, Detry, & Brown, 2013) was correlated with more favourable attitudes. Young adults were reported to have less positive attitudes towards seeking professional help than older adults (Gonzalez, Alegria, & Prihoda, 2005;Robb, Haley, Becker, Polivka, & Chwa, 2003). Older adults have generally more positive attitudes, but they prefer physicians instead of specialized mental health services (James & Buttle, 2008;Mackenzie et al., 2006). A European epidemiological study of mental disorders reported that more positive attitudes towards mental health help-seeking were associated with being younger than 65 years (ten Have et al., 2010). This study did not find associations between educational levels and attitudes, while others did (Jagdeo, Cox, Stein, & Sareen, 2009;Riedel-Heller, Matschinger, & Angermeyer, 2005). Higher educated, older adults had more favourable attitudes regarding help-seeking propensity, but this positive effect of education on attitudes was only found for men (Mackenzie et al., 2006).

Inventory of Attitudes towards Seeking
Mental Health Services (IASMHS;  IASMHS comprises three scales: help-seeking propensity, psychological openness, and indifference to stigma. Help-seeking propensity refers to an individual's intention and perceived ability to seek professional help for a psychological problem. Psychological openness represents an individual's disposition to acknowledge psychological problems and to consider seeking professional help. The extent to which individuals are concerned about significant others opinion if they find out that they were receiving professional help is represented through the indifference to stigma subscale .  demonstrated that IASHMS discriminates between participants who had and those who had not used mental health services. IASMHS has been used to investigate attitudes in college students Mojaverian, Hashimoto, & Kim, 2012;Wahto & Swift, 2016;Yousaf, Popat, & Hunter, 2015), adolescents (Munson, Floersch, & Townsend, 2010), older adults (Kessler, Agines, & Bowen, 2014), psychotherapy clients (Elkins, Swift, & Campbell, 2016), and specific ethnic groups: Alaska natives (Freitas-Murrell & Swift, 2015), South Asians (Loya, Reddy, & Hinshaw, 2010), Chinese immigrants (Tieu & Konnert, 2014), and African Americans (Ward et al., 2013;Watson & Hunter, 2015). Only a few studies screened for mental disorders (Mackenzie et al., 2006;Mesidor & Sly, 2014;Munson et al., 2010;Troeung, Gasson, & Egan, 2015;Ward et al., 2013;Watson & Hunter, 2015) and intentions to (or actual) mental health service use (Freitas-Murrell & Swift, 2015;James & Buttle, 2008;Martin & Howe, 2016;Tieu & Konnert, 2014). Two studies considered both mental disorders and intentions to/or actual mental health service use (Mackenzie et al., 2006;Mesidor & Sly, 2014). Three studies investigated trauma related samples: suicide bereaved adults (Drapeau, Cerel, & Moore, 2016), police officers (Hyland et al., 2014), and homeless and at-risk housed youth (Martin & Howe, 2016); none assessed trauma related disorders. Although some studies have been carried out on mental health service use of people with mental disorders, very little is known about trauma survivors' attitudes towards service use. Since many trauma survivors with potentially treatable disorders seem to be reluctant to seek mental health services, we intended to investigate attitudes towards service use in a sample of adult survivors of institutional abuse with IASMHS. Institutional abuse survivors experienced sexual, physical, and/or emotional abuse in their early lives and many are affected by mental disorders and psychosocial problems in their adulthood (Fitzpatrick et al., 2010;Lueger-Schuster et al., 2013). As research on attitudes towards mental health service use in clinical samples is rather sparse, we intended to provide a first exploratory comparison of IASMHS scales in our trial with other psychological distressed samples.
The main aims of the present study were (1) to investigate the reliability and construct validity of IASHMS, (2) to investigate the power of IASMHS in predicting current mental health service use when also considering the effects of PTSD-symptoms, depression, age, and gender in the model, and (3) to discuss attitudes towards seeking professional help of institutional abuse survivors against the background of other samples with possible mental health problems.

Background and procedure
Study participants were adult Austrian survivors of institutional abuse perpetrated during their childhood in Viennese foster care institutions. Institutional abuse is characterized by an omnipresent authority that exaggeratedly controls every aspect of children's lives in institutionalized foster care settings (Goffman, 1987) and an inappropriate and potentially harmful use of power that threatens children`s well-being (Wolfe, Jaffe, Jette, & Poisson, 2003). The Austrian institutional abuse survivors reported experiences of abuse to a victim protection commission and were offered financial compensation and/or psychotherapy from the local government. In a next step, they were invited to participate in the larger Vienna Institutional Abuse Study (VIAS), which was designated to investigate long-term correlates of institutional abuse. Data for the present study came from VIAS. The study received ethical approval from the Ethics Committee of the University of Vienna and all participants gave written informed consent. Structured clinical interviews and questionnaires were administered by trained clinical psychologists in face-to-face interviews.
Compared with the Austrian population the educational levels were low: the majority of the sample (63.2%) completed an apprenticeship or a vocational school without an A-level degree (10-12 years of education without general qualification for university entrance; Austrian population: 49.8%), 19.5% attended compulsory school (nine years of education; Austrian population: 19.1%), 4.1% received an A-level education (12 years of education with general qualification for university entrance; Austrian population: 14.8%), 3.2% had a university degree (>15 years of education; Austrian population: 16.2%), and 10.0% did not complete compulsory school (<9 years of education; Austrian population: <1%).
All participants in the present study experienced at least one childhood trauma or potentially traumatic life event.

Measures
2.3.1. Attitudes towards mental health service use When interviewed with IASMHS  participants are invited to rate their agreement with 24 statements on a five-point scale from 'disagree' (0) to 'agree' (4). For the current study we used the German version (Kessler et al., 2014). Kessler et al. (2014) preferred the term 'professional psychological help' to receiving mental health support from psychologists or psychiatrists. IASMHS was tested in a convenience sample of adults and showed good internal consistence (Cronbach's α = .82) with α ranging from .76 to .82 in the three subscales. The testretest reliability was investigated in a sample of undergraduate students and resulted in a total score of r = .85 (p < .01). The test-retest reliability for the single scales were as follows: psychological openness, r = .86, p < .01; help-seeking propensity, r = .64, p < .01; indifference to stigma, r = .91, p < .01 ). In the current study the internal consistence was: psychological openness, α = .67; help-seeking propensity, α = .80; indifference to stigma, α = .77; total score, α = .84.

PTSD symptoms
The PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 (PCL-5; Weathers et al., 2013;Wortmann et al., 2016) assesses 20 PTSD symptoms on a five-point scale ranging from 'not at all' (0) to 'extremely' (5). PTSD is diagnosed if participants scored 'moderately' (2) or above on at least one re-experiencing symptom (B criterion), one avoiding symptom (C criterion), two negative alterations in cognitions and mood symptoms (D criterion), and two hyperarousal symptoms (E criterion).
The Childhood Trauma Questionnaire Short-Form (CTQ-SF; Bernstein et al., 2003) and the Life Events Checklist (LEC-5; Weathers et al., 2013) were used to assess the stressor-criterion (criterion A) of PTSD. In the CTQ-SF participants were asked to indicate, on a five-point scale ranging from 'never true' (1) to 'very often true' (5), if they were exposed to various childhood traumata (28 items); in the LEC-5 participants were asked if they experienced or witnessed potentially traumatic life events (17 items).

Depression symptoms
We used the depression-subscale of the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI-18; Derogatis, 2001), which was demonstrated to be an appropriate short-form of the original 53-item version (Derogatis & Melisaratos, 1983). Participants were asked to self-rate different symptoms they experienced over the last seven days on a five-point scale ranging from 'not at all' (0) to 'extremely' (4). The psychometric properties for the present study were good (Cronbach's α = .88).

Mental health service use
Current mental health service use was queried with the following question and a dichotomous response format: 'Do you currently receive psychological treatment or psychotherapy?' If participants answered 'yes' they were asked about the duration of the treatment in an open response format. If participants attended a minimum of at least eight sessions within 12 months we defined this as 'receiving treatment' (Wang, Demler, & Kessler, 2000;Wang et al., 2005).

Statistical analysis
Analyses were conducted with SPSS 22 (IBM Corp., 2013) and R-package lavaan (Rosseel, 2012) in statistical environment R (R Development Core Team, 2016). In a first step, we evaluated the psychometric properties of IASMHS by calculating the reliability index Cronbach's α and by confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) to assess the fit of the data to different structural models of IASMHS. We estimated two CFA models (one-and three-factor CFA model, reflecting a general factor model and the three dimensions of IASMHS, respectively) and one bifactor model. Confirmatory bifactor modelling is a technique in which the item covariance is explained by a single general factor and two or more orthogonal 'group' factors (Reise, Moore, & Haviland, 2010). This model assumes that all items measure a common latent trait and thus all items load on one factor (attitudes towards seeking MHS); it furthermore assumes that the variance of all items is also influenced by independent factors reflecting the unique covariance among subsets of items (psychological openness, indifference to stigma, help-seeking propensity). This procedure was also applied by Hyland et al. (2014) and thus allows for a close comparison of the results.
In all models we used robust parameter estimation (weighted least square mean-and variance-adjusted estimator, WLSMV) to account for the ordered categorical structure of the item ratings and to provide robust parameter estimation, standard errors, and tests of model fit (Beauducel & Herzberg, 2006). Model fit was assessed using widely-used benchmarks (Hu & Bentler, 1999), utilizing the comparative fit index (CFI), the Tucker-Lewis index (TLI; CFI and TLI: good fit: ≥ .95, acceptable fit: ≥ .90), and the root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA; good fit: < .06, acceptable fit: < .08). To obtain the Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) for comparison of the three different models, we reran the analyses with robust maximum likelihood estimation (MLR).
In a second step, we used binominal logistic regression analysis to predict current psychotherapy use. We used the three scales of IASMHS (psychological openness, help-seeking propensity, indifference to stigma) as predictors in the regression model. To consider the previously reported associations of psychopathological symptom burden, age, and gender, we also included the four PTSD dimensions (intrusions, avoidance, negative alterations in cognitions and mood, alterations in arousal and reactivity), the depression score, age, and gender in the analysis.
Finally, we compared the attitudes towards mental health services as measured by IASMHS to those reported by other studies with different samples.

Results
The descriptive statistics of IASMHS scales are presented in Table 5. The mean sum score of the CTQ-SF values was 69.17 (SD = 12.02). This was significantly higher than the mean sum scores of a repre- The mean scores for the PCL-5 subscales were: intrusion: 1.59 (SD = 1.27), avoidance: 1.59 (SD = 1.36), negative alterations in cognition or mood: 1.18 (SD = .97), arousal and reactivity: 1.49 (SD = .91). The mean score for the BSI depression scale was 1.02 (SD = 1.02). In our sample, 94 individuals (42.7%) were currently using mental health services.
The fit indices of the factor structure analyses of IASMHS are presented in Table 1. The one-factor model did not provide good fit to the data according to all fit indices and also had the highest BIC. The three-factor model and the bifactor model had similar fit, however the three-factor model clearly had the lower BIC and was thus superior to the bifactor model. Therefore, in our sample, the proposed three-factor structure of IASMHS provided the best fit to the data and was retained for further analyses.  Table 2 shows the factor loadings of all items in the three-factor model. Several items of the psychological openness scale loaded only weakly on their according factor (β < .50): item 1, item 4, item 7, and item 14.
One item of the indifference to stigma scale loaded weakly on its factor (item 23). The inter-factor correlations varied from r = .25 to r = .70. We conducted a binomial logistic regression analysis to predict current mental health service use (Table 3). All bivariate correlations of the included variables are displayed in Table 4. The regression model correctly predicted 73.9% of the cases (78.4% of the no current mental health service use group and 67.7% of the current mental health service use group; χ 2 (df = 10) = 68.0, p < .001) and explained 36% of the variance (Nagelkerkes R 2 = .36, Cox & Snell R 2 = .27). The Wald statistic demonstrated that the help-seeking propensity scale, the PTSD-intrusion scale, and the depression scale made a significant contribution to the prediction. To rule out a possible bias due to those IASMHS items that loaded only weakly on their according factors, we repeated the regression analysis with a reduced set of items based on the results of the CFA: items 1, 4, 7, and 14 were omitted from the psychological openness scale and item 23 was omitted from the indifference to stigma scale. The results of the regression analysis with those reduced scales did not differ from those with the full scales and are therefore not presented here in detail. Table 5 compares the results obtained from IASMHS scale in the present study with results of previous research. The current sample was characterized by significantly higher levels in IASMHS scales compared to most of these distressed samples (Mesidor & Sly, 2014;  (1) 'There are certain problems which should not be discussed outside of one's immediate family' 0.30 1.00 -(4) 'Keeping one's mind on a job is a good solution for avoiding personal worries and concerns' 0.23 0.78 0.31 (7) 'It is probably best not to know everything about oneself' 0.33 1.13 0.41 (9) 'People should work out their own problems; getting professional help should be a last resort' 0.79 2.67 0.76 (12) 'Psychological problems, like many things, tend to work out by themselves' 0.65 2.19 0.66 (14)  PO = Psychological openness, IS = Indifference to stigma, HSP = Help seeking propensity; all but one factor loadings were statistically significant at p < .01; item 23 was significant at p < .05 Table 3. Binominal logistic regression analysis to predict current MHS use.  Troeung et al., 2015;Watson & Hunter, 2015). However, a sample of suicide-bereaved adults reported higher levels in the help-seeking propensity and the full IASMHS scale (Drapeau et al., 2016).

Discussion
In the present study we aimed to investigate the psychometric properties of IASHMS, to ascertain the predictive power of IASMHS beyond specific variables, and to compare help-seeking attitudes between institutional abuse survivors and other samples with possible mental health problems. We replicated the proposed factor structure of IASMHS  in the institutional abuse sample. Although a three-factor bifactor model fit the data well, the confirmatory factor analysis supported the three-factor model and confirmed the intended three-factor theory of IASMHS (Hyland et al., 2014;. However, some items (1, 4, 7, 14) of the psychological openness scale loaded weakly on their according factor, which corresponded with the findings of Hyland et al. (2014). It might be reasonable to adjust these items in future research with the goal to better represent the characteristics of this subscale. For example, item 4 'Keeping one's mind on a job is a good solution for avoiding personal worries and concerns' could also be understood as a healthy coping strategy of individuals that acknowledge their psychological problems and seek professional help. The items of the indifference to stigma and help-seeking propensity scale loaded adequately on their corresponding factors. The internal consistency of IASHMS waswith the exception of the psychological openness scalesimilar to the results of prior research .
To assess the predictive validity of IASMHS as part of a criterion-oriented validation process (Cronbach & Meehl, 1955), we investigated the predictive power of the three IASMHS scales for current mental health service use, when also including PTSD, depression, age, and gender as predictors in the model. The results showed that higher scores in the help-seeking propensity and the PTSD-intrusion scales, and lower scores in the depression scale contributed significantly to the prediction of current mental health service use. The help-seeking propensity scale refers to an individuals' intention and ability to seek help. Similarly, Mackenzie et al. (2006) found a strong predictive association between help-seeking propensity and intentions to seek professional help. Intentions in turn were described as the strongest predictor for actual help-seeking behaviour (Ajzen, 1985). Help-seeking propensity emerged as a reliable predictor of intentions to mental health service use in several studies (e.g. Hyland et al., 2014;Mesidor & Sly, 2014;Troeung et al., 2015). Single studies indicated significantalthough weakercorrelations between mental health service use and psychological openness (Hyland et al., 2014), or indifference to stigma . In one case the psychological openness scale was removed due to low internal Pearson correlation coefficients of variables included in the regression model; point biserial correlation coefficient for gender; a negative alterations in cognition and mood; b alterations in arousal and reactivity; *p < .05; **p < .01.  Watson and Hunter (2015): N = 95, African American women with possible anxiety/depression symptoms; b Drapeau et al. (2016): N = 418, suicide-bereaved adults; PO subscale was excluded due to low internal consistency (α = 0.68); c Mesidor and Sly (2014): N = 111, African American College Students with possible psychological distress; d Troeung et al. (2015): N = 327, Australian adults with Parkinson's Disease and possible mental health problems; e t-tests comparing study sample to previous research samples; *p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < 0.001.
consistency (Drapeau et al., 2016). We suppose that sample characteristics contributed to these differences in at least two possible ways. First, we assume that the relationship between psychological openness and mental health service use might be affected by sample-specific aspects such as the experience of institutional betrayal (Smith & Freyd, 2014). Survivors of institutional abuse experienced violent abuse of power during their youth by authorities whose duty was to protect and care for them. Those experiences might result in suspiciousness towards authorities, such as mental health professionals. This might be associated with a complex interaction between psychological openness and mental health service use. Second, all participants were offered financial compensation and psychotherapy by the victim protection commission, although not all participants underwent treatment. It is possible that this lowered the predictive power of both the psychological openness and stigma scales compared to other samples. Furthermore, it should be considered that these comparisons represent a first exploratory approach towards the integration of existing research on mental health service use and attitudes in distressed samples. This comparison might be biased by the heterogeneity of the samples and should be investigated systematically in future research. We found, in a systematic review on perceived barriers and facilitators to mental health service use, that PTSD-symptoms, according to re-experiencing, prevent trauma survivors from engaging in professional treatment (Kantor, Knefel, & Lueger-Schuster, 2017); intrusion predicted mental health service use in the present study. A possible explanation may be that severe psychopathology leads to higher psychological strain and therefore a wish for change (Bicanic, Snetselaar, de Jongh, & van de Putte, 2014;Gavrilovic et al., 2005;Kantor et al., 2017). In contrast, depression deterred participants from helpseeking which could be attributed to the nature of depression including fatigue, loss of activities, and hopelessness (Sherwood, Salkovskis, & Rimes, 2007).
Studies investigating attitudes towards mental health service use in samples with possible mental health problems found homogenous profiles in the relative differences of IASMHS scales. The help-seeking propensity scale frequently showed higher levels than the psychological openness scale, whereas the indifference to stigma subscale showed the lowest levels among the scales. However, the absolute scale-levels differed significantly between samples: African Americans and adults with Parkinson's Disease showed lower scores in IASMHS scales (Mesidor & Sly, 2014;Troeung et al., 2015;Watson & Hunter, 2015). Only suicide bereaved adults reported significantly higher scores in two of the three scales compared to the institutional abuse sample (Drapeau et al., 2016). Compared to other samples, institutional abuse survivors showed relatively positive attitudes which could be explained by their psychotherapy experience (Gavrilovic et al., 2005) and lower barriers to service use in the course of the governmental recompense process. Future research should seek to determine the change in attitudes in relation to prior psychotherapy experiences, as well as the longitudinal development of attitudes regarding symptom severity and trauma experiences. Practical implementations should target help-seeking propensity in order to facilitate intention (psycho-education) and perceived ability to seek help (lowering external barriers). Online tools and mobile applications, for instance, have the potential to contribute to help-seeking propensity as they are increasingly available, are barrier-free, have a wide reach, and offer psycho-education and useful therapeutic interventions (Olff, 2015;Ruzek et al., 2011). This is the first study investigating the psychometric properties of IASMHS in a trauma sample that was screened for traumatic experiences and PTSD-symptoms. Further, in contrast to earlier studies we examined the current mental health service use rather than intentions to use. However, there are a number of limitations that should be noted. First, although institutional abuse is a worldwide phenomenon and our results may thus generalize to other adult survivors of abuse in institutional settings, generalizability may still be limited by the use of crosssectional data and this specific sample of trauma survivors. Second, although we encouraged the participants to answer openly, as with all research on attitudes the participants' answers might be biased towards social desirability. Third, prior positive psychotherapy experienceseven decades agomight have influenced participants current attitudes, which was not assessed in this study and can thus not be ruled out. Fourth, in order to differ mental health service use from non-use we defined treatment-use as receiving a minimum of eight therapy sessions within 12 months. We applied this definition for the purpose of establishing comparability across studies using the same cut-off value (Wang et al., 2000). However, using a different cut-off value might be associated with different results. Fifth, a quantitative assessment might be restricted in its potential to map the complex process underlying mental health service use and could be enriched by a qualitative approach.

Conclusion
Understanding institutional abuse survivors' attitudes towards mental health service use seems to be crucial to facilitate treatment use. IASMHS is a useful instrument in assessing survivors' attitudes, even if some items might benefit from an adjustment. Post-trauma interventions should target trauma survivors' helpseeking propensity to facilitate mental health service use.