Alegría Margarita, Canino Glorisa, Ríos Ruth, Vera Mildred, Calderón José, Rusch Dana, Ortega Alexander N
Center for Multicultural Mental Health Research, Cambridge Health Alliance, 120 Beacon Street Fourth Floor, Somerville, MA 02143, USA.
Psychiatr Serv. 2002 Dec;53(12):1547-55. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.53.12.1547.
The authors investigated whether there are disparities in the rates of specialty mental health care for Latinos and African Americans compared with non-Latino whites in the United States.
Data were analyzed from the 1990-1992 National Comorbidity Survey, which surveyed a probability sample of 8,098 English-speaking respondents aged 15 to 54 years. Respondents self-identified their race or ethnicity, yielding a sample of 695 Latinos, 987 African Americans, and 6,026 non-Latino whites. Data on demographic characteristics, insurance status, psychiatric morbidity, whether the respondent lived in an urban or a rural area, geographic location, income, and use of mental health services were determined for each ethnic or racial group. Logistic regression analyses were used to examine the associations between ethnic or racial group and use of specialty services, with relevant covariates adjusted for.
Significant differences between ethnic groups were found in demographic characteristics, geographic location, zone of residence, insurance status, income, wealth, and use of mental health services. The results indicated that poor Latinos (family income of less than $15,000) have lower access to specialty care than poor non-Latino whites. African Americans who were not classified as poor were less likely to receive specialty care than their white counterparts, even after adjustment for demographic characteristics, insurance status, and psychiatric morbidity.
To understand ethnic or racial disparities in specialty care, the effects of ethnicity or race should be analyzed in combination with variables related to poverty status and environmental context. Further research needs to address the complex construct of social position in order to bridge the gap in unmet need in specialty care.
作者调查了在美国,拉丁裔和非裔美国人与非拉丁裔白人相比,在接受专科心理健康护理的比例上是否存在差异。
对1990 - 1992年全国共病调查的数据进行分析,该调查对8098名年龄在15至54岁的英语受访者进行了概率抽样。受访者自行确定自己的种族或族裔,得到一个包含695名拉丁裔、987名非裔美国人和6026名非拉丁裔白人的样本。确定了每个种族或族裔群体的人口统计学特征、保险状况、精神疾病发病率、受访者居住在城市还是农村地区、地理位置、收入以及心理健康服务的使用情况。使用逻辑回归分析来检验种族或族裔群体与专科服务使用之间的关联,并对相关协变量进行了调整。
在人口统计学特征、地理位置、居住区域、保险状况、收入、财富以及心理健康服务的使用方面,不同种族群体之间存在显著差异。结果表明,贫困的拉丁裔(家庭收入低于15,000美元)获得专科护理的机会比贫困的非拉丁裔白人少。即使在对人口统计学特征、保险状况和精神疾病发病率进行调整之后,未被归类为贫困的非裔美国人接受专科护理的可能性仍低于其白人 counterparts。
为了理解专科护理中的种族或族裔差异,应结合与贫困状况和环境背景相关的变量来分析种族或族裔的影响。需要进一步的研究来探讨社会地位这一复杂结构,以弥合专科护理中未满足需求的差距。