Zac Seidler is a clinical psychologist and a doctoral candidate in the School of Psychology.
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Men鈥檚 vulnerability to poor mental health and risk of suicide is being compounded by training programs offered by Australia鈥檚 medical schools and professional bodies, a new study shows.
An audit of available online information from all 18 Australian medical programs in 2017 reveals that 鈥渕asculinity-based constructs鈥 are rarely integrated into men鈥檚 health or mental-health related training.
One program makes specific reference to masculinity in the curriculum.
鈥淭he audit of publicly available information from Australian medical programs and their professional bodies reveals increasing awareness of the needs of men. However, there is limited practical inclusion of masculinity models in training and practice,鈥 said study author, , a PhD candidate in the at the University of Sydney.
鈥淢en account for three-quarters of deaths from suicides in Australia and despite initiatives like and promoting help-seeking and early intervention for men and boys, Australian males engage less with mental-health services than their female peers.
鈥淗owever, men will seek help for mental-health concerns when both practitioners and the services they work in employ practice-changes in line with social determinants of health, such as masculinity.鈥
Mr Seidler said men present with 鈥渃omplex, diverse and often contradictory expressions of masculinity that are relevant to their health status鈥.
The study was published in Australasian Psychiatry. Wednesday 10 October is .