Use or no use? Young people's engagement with mental health services
Use or no use? Young people's engagement with mental health services
Mental health challenges among young people are a significant concern in the United Kingdom, with an estimated 16 % of young people experiencing common mental health problems like anxiety and/or depression on any given day, yet only one in four of these are able to access mental health services. This study seeks to identify the key determinants influencing young people's mental health care utilization and to examine the experiences faced by those who do not engage with mental health services, using a co-produced adaptation of Andersen's Behavioral Model of Health Care Utilization to analyze linked health care data from the NEXT STEPS cohort. Imputation addressed missing data, while logistic regression assessed need, enablers, and predispositions influencing care use. Key findings indicate that young people's mental health care utilization is primarily driven by clinically assessed need, while factors such as female gender, presence of psychiatric-level symptoms, limited social support, external locus of control, parental unemployment emerged as weaker predictors of service engagement. Young people with common mental health problems who had not accessed mental health services were less likely than service users to be female, live in single-parent households, have caring responsibilities, or report bullying, but were more likely to report positive parental relationships. Adults who had accessed mental health services as a young person experienced less favourable adult outcomes and quality of life relative to non-users. These findings highlight the need to reform youth mental health care models towards more inclusive, preventative, and holistic approaches.
NEXT STEPS, mental health care utilisation, Young people, common mental health problems, co-production, logistic regression
169-176
Driessens, Corine
59335f14-4ead-4692-9969-7ed9cc1ccf08
Markham-Jones, Kim
178c3e50-7a8e-4618-b0ec-5ef788ceca10
Davenport, Nicole
77fea088-479a-4bde-a69e-9295b5d054a9
Hassan, Mahdi
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Iqbal, Shahrbano
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Skelton, Friday
8656eb03-69e0-42eb-828c-87bbf2238abf
Lacey, Fiona
7349bc74-f0bf-495c-bc83-546a418427af
Smith, Peter W.F.
961a01a3-bf4c-43ca-9599-5be4fd5d3940
2 February 2026
Driessens, Corine
59335f14-4ead-4692-9969-7ed9cc1ccf08
Markham-Jones, Kim
178c3e50-7a8e-4618-b0ec-5ef788ceca10
Davenport, Nicole
77fea088-479a-4bde-a69e-9295b5d054a9
Hassan, Mahdi
b4a1e4c8-84ba-4dbe-820d-e6d963578ad2
Iqbal, Shahrbano
9d7ccfa1-459e-4615-8fb5-5d3eb22d765b
Skelton, Friday
8656eb03-69e0-42eb-828c-87bbf2238abf
Lacey, Fiona
7349bc74-f0bf-495c-bc83-546a418427af
Smith, Peter W.F.
961a01a3-bf4c-43ca-9599-5be4fd5d3940
Driessens, Corine, Markham-Jones, Kim, Davenport, Nicole, Hassan, Mahdi, Iqbal, Shahrbano, Skelton, Friday, Lacey, Fiona and Smith, Peter W.F.
(2026)
Use or no use? Young people's engagement with mental health services.
Journal of Psychiatric Research, 195, .
(doi:10.1016/j.jpsychires.2026.01.034).
Abstract
Mental health challenges among young people are a significant concern in the United Kingdom, with an estimated 16 % of young people experiencing common mental health problems like anxiety and/or depression on any given day, yet only one in four of these are able to access mental health services. This study seeks to identify the key determinants influencing young people's mental health care utilization and to examine the experiences faced by those who do not engage with mental health services, using a co-produced adaptation of Andersen's Behavioral Model of Health Care Utilization to analyze linked health care data from the NEXT STEPS cohort. Imputation addressed missing data, while logistic regression assessed need, enablers, and predispositions influencing care use. Key findings indicate that young people's mental health care utilization is primarily driven by clinically assessed need, while factors such as female gender, presence of psychiatric-level symptoms, limited social support, external locus of control, parental unemployment emerged as weaker predictors of service engagement. Young people with common mental health problems who had not accessed mental health services were less likely than service users to be female, live in single-parent households, have caring responsibilities, or report bullying, but were more likely to report positive parental relationships. Adults who had accessed mental health services as a young person experienced less favourable adult outcomes and quality of life relative to non-users. These findings highlight the need to reform youth mental health care models towards more inclusive, preventative, and holistic approaches.
Text
1-s2.0-S0022395626000452-main
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 26 January 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 January 2026
Published date: 2 February 2026
Keywords:
NEXT STEPS, mental health care utilisation, Young people, common mental health problems, co-production, logistic regression
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 509906
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509906
ISSN: 0022-3956
PURE UUID: 0d99699d-bb51-42dc-9f13-fb7be12c5f9e
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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2026 17:52
Last modified: 11 Mar 2026 02:46
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Contributors
Author:
Corine Driessens
Author:
Kim Markham-Jones
Author:
Nicole Davenport
Author:
Mahdi Hassan
Author:
Shahrbano Iqbal
Author:
Friday Skelton
Author:
Fiona Lacey
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