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Student-Athlete and Student Non-Athletes’ Stigma and Attitudes Toward Seeking Online and Face-to-Face Counseling

Matthew D. Bird, Graig M. Chow, Gily Meir, and Jaison Freeman

investigating the attitudes that student-athletes hold towards this form of counseling. Attitudes toward mental health counseling have shown to be significantly associated with service use ( ten Have et al., 2010 ). As attitudes toward mental health help-seeking increase, so too does the likelihood that one

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A Program to Reduce Stigma Toward Mental Illness and Promote Mental Health Literacy and Help-Seeking in National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I Student-Athletes

Graig M. Chow, Matthew D. Bird, Nicole T. Gabana, Brandon T. Cooper, and Martin A. Swanbrow Becker

counseling, intentions to seek help, and help-seeking behavior in college students, it has been shown that perceived public stigma is positively related to self-stigma, that self-stigma is negatively related to counseling attitudes, and that counseling attitudes are positively related to a willingness to

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The Relationships Among Self-Compassion, Stigma, and Attitudes Toward Counseling in Student-Athletes

Robert C. Hilliard, Lorenzo A. Redmond, and Jack C. Watson II

association of stigma with counseling attitudes. Self-Compassion and Help-Seeking Self-compassion is a concept rooted in Buddhist philosophy that Neff ( 2003 ) described as “being touched by and open to one’s own suffering, not avoiding, or disconnecting from it, generating the desire to alleviate one