Thomas Marshall R, Waxmonsky Jeanette A, Gabow Patricia A, Flanders-McGinnis Gretchen, Socherman Robert, Rost Kathryn
Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado at Denver and Denver Health Medical Center 80220, USA.
Psychiatr Serv. 2005 Nov;56(11):1394-401. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.56.11.1394.
Little is known about how psychiatric disorders affect health care costs in Medicaid programs. The prevalence of psychiatric disorders and costs of care for members of a Medicaid health maintenance organization (HMO) who had psychiatric disorders were examined.
A cross-sectional, observational analysis of adult Medicaid beneficiaries over a 12-month period was conducted by using data from a health plan that has both an HMO and a behavioral health carve-out. Claims data were analyzed for 6,500 adults who were eligible for services in both plans and who received medical or behavioral health services during calendar year 2000.
Thirty-nine percent of the 6,500 adults had a psychiatric diagnosis. Of this subset, 67.2 percent had received no specialty mental health care in the previous year. The presence of any psychiatric diagnosis significantly increased total health care costs by a factor of 2.24 ($6,995 compared with $3,121 for persons with no psychiatric diagnosis) and costs to the medical plan by a factor of 1.77 ($4,690 compared with $2,649). For beneficiaries with bipolar or psychotic diagnoses, higher health plan costs were due predominately to increases in pharmacy and specialty mental health costs. In contrast, higher costs for beneficiaries with depression, anxiety, or substance use diagnoses were attributable to greater use of general medical services.
An analysis of claims data showed that adult Medicaid beneficiaries have exceptionally high rates of comorbid psychiatric conditions, which were associated with significantly higher medical and pharmaceutical costs. The high cost of these beneficiaries to the medical plan has policy implications in terms of the importance of addressing mental health issues in Medicaid general medical populations.
关于精神疾病如何影响医疗补助计划中的医疗保健成本,我们了解得很少。我们对一个医疗补助健康维护组织(HMO)中患有精神疾病的成员的精神疾病患病率及护理成本进行了研究。
利用一个同时拥有HMO和行为健康专项服务的健康计划的数据,对成年医疗补助受益人群进行了为期12个月的横断面观察性分析。对2000年日历年期间有资格在这两个计划中接受服务且接受过医疗或行为健康服务的6500名成年人的索赔数据进行了分析。
6500名成年人中有39%被诊断患有精神疾病。在这个子集中,67.2%的人在前一年没有接受过专科心理健康护理。任何精神疾病诊断的存在都会使总医疗保健成本显著增加2.24倍(无精神疾病诊断的人为3121美元,有精神疾病诊断的人为6995美元),使医疗计划成本增加1.77倍(无精神疾病诊断的人为2649美元,有精神疾病诊断的人为4690美元)。对于患有双相情感障碍或精神病诊断的受益人,较高的健康计划成本主要归因于药房和专科心理健康成本的增加。相比之下,患有抑郁症、焦虑症或物质使用障碍诊断的受益人的较高成本则归因于对一般医疗服务的更多使用。
对索赔数据的分析表明,成年医疗补助受益人共病精神疾病的发生率异常高,这与显著更高的医疗和药品成本相关。这些受益人给医疗计划带来的高成本在解决医疗补助普通医疗人群心理健康问题的重要性方面具有政策意义。