Abstract
Epidemiological studies have shown that most people with diagnosable psychiatric illnesses do not seek professional help. Symptoms of non-psychotic emotional illness, interpersonal relationship quality and personality traits have demonstrable associations. The influence of these factors on help-seeking was examined by comparing 57 psychiatric outpatients with a community sample of 90 symptomatic individuals on self-report measures of marital intimacy, life events, and personality, while controlling for symptomatology. Compared to non-patients, outpatients reported less intimacy in their marriages across a variety of relationship dimensions on the Waring Intimacy Questionnaire, and scored higher on the Psychoticism scale of the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire. Marital Intimacy level proved to be the best single predictor of patient and non-patient status, suggesting that help-seeking behaviour may be partly motivated by unsatisfactory marriages. The detection of low marital intimacy in these help-seekers might be an indication for prescribing marital therapy.
