Objectives : The current study examines how situational context and bystander characteristics influence bystander intervention in scenarios involving a victim experiencing a mental health crisis.
Methods: Using a national demographically matched sample of 850 adults in the United States and a factorial design with audio vignettes (which varied in victim symptomatology, victim/offender sex, event location, and type of victimization), we examined how the context and characteristics of bystanders influence indirect and direct bystander intervention.
Results: Using logistic regression models, results show that all varied situational factors influenced bystander intervention. Several domains of bystander characteristics, including those specific to mental health, biopsychosocial factors, and demographics impacted bystander intervention.
Conclusions: Understanding who intervenes and why is essential for developing strategies that foster sustained engagement. Our findings provide avenues to ensure the durability of intervention effects through targeting individual characteristics and motivations that influence decision-making in behavioral crisis situations.
Files and links (2)
pdf
Who helps, who intervenes?: Understanding bystander characteristics and intervention using audio-vignettes involving mental health scenarios719.41 kBDownloadView
Published (Version of record)Article pdfCC BY V4.0, Open Access
url
Who helps, who intervenes?: Understanding bystander characteristics and intervention using audio-vignettes involving mental health scenariosView
Published (Version of record)link to articleCC BY V4.0, Open
Related links
Details
Title
Who helps, who intervenes?
Publication Details
Journal of experimental criminology, Vol.online ahead of print
Resource Type
Journal article
Publisher
Springer New York LLC; DORDRECHT
Number of pages
23
Grant note
Carolinas Consortium
Open access funding provided by the Carolinas Consortium.