One study found that Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders are significantly less likely than Caucasians to mention their mental health concerns to:
o
a friend or relative (12% vs. 25%),
o
a mental health professional (4% vs. 26%),
o
or a physician (2% vs. 13%).8
Asian Americans do not access mental health treatment as much as other racial/ethnic groups do, perhaps due to strong stigma related to mental illness. Emotional problems are viewed as shameful and distressing and this may limit help-seeking behaviors. Asian Americans also tend to rely on family to handle problems.9
Asian American and Pacific Islanders are concerned about negatively affecting their social network which keeps them from seeking help.10
Ethnic and Cultural Considerations
For nearly half of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, access to the mental health care system is limited due to their lack of English proficiency and to a shortage of providers with appropriate language skills.11
This report was funded by the Suicide Prevention Resource Center, which is supported by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
(SAMHSA), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (Grant No. 1 U79SM55029-01).
Many Asian American and Pacific Islander cultures view the psychological and physical as highly interconnected, unlike the common view in Western cultures. Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders may be more likely to express emotional distress through physical problems and to believe that physical problems cause emotional disturbances.12
http://www.sprc.org/library/asian.pi.facts.pdf