Insights Report Sep 2020
Mental health of Australian males: depression, suicidality and loneliness
This chapter explores the significant burden of poor mental health among men and the gaps in men's help-seeking behaviour.
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Insights Report Sep 2020
This chapter explores the significant burden of poor mental health among men and the gaps in men's help-seeking behaviour.
Insights Report Nov 2022
This chapter examines health care usage among men in the context of their reported depressive symptoms and in consideration of need.
Major Report May 2013
This report provides an overview of analyses conducted to evaluate the performance of the study instruments developed for the baseline wave of the Ten to Men study and pilot tested in the 2012/3 pilot study.
Insights Report Nov 2022
This insights report aims to provide a broad overview of the health of males in Australia and highlight specific concerns affecting this group.
Insights Report Sep 2020
This chapter looks at health care use among Australian men. It includes health engagement, information sources, and types of services accessed.
Data use Documentation Sep 2023
The Ten to Men Guide to items and scales provides data users with contextual information on the scales and items included in the Ten to Men Wave 4 dataset, such as the source, scoring, psychometric information and the rationale for inclusion.
Data use Documentation Sep 2023
The Ten to Men Guide to items and scales provides data users with contextual information on the scales and items included in the Ten to Men Wave 4 dataset, such as the source, scoring, psychometric information and the rationale for inclusion.
Journal article Jun 2020
This study examines associations between conformity to masculine norms and suicidal ideation in a sample of adolescents.
Major Report May 2015
This report considers a number of commonly used age grouping schemas and explores the utility of such age groupings in describing age-related patterns of health behaviour and outcomes.
Journal article Jan 2023
The study provides robust longitudinal evidence supporting the notion that social support and depression are both a cause and consequence of the other. However, the long-term effects of depression reducing social support were longer lasting than the effects of social support reducing depression.