School of Social Work, University of Southern California, 655 West 34th Street, Los Angeles, CA 90089, USA.
Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy. 2013 Sep 23;8:34. doi: 10.1186/1747-597X-8-34.
The high prevalence of mental health issues among clients attending substance abuse treatment (SAT) has pressured treatment providers to develop integrated substance abuse and mental health care. However, access to integrated care is limited to certain communities. Racial and ethnic minority and low-income communities may not have access to needed integrated care in large urban areas. Because the main principle of health care reform is to expand health insurance to low-income individuals to improve access to care and reduce health disparities among minorities, it is necessary to understand the extent to which integrated care is geographically accessible in minority and low-income communities.
National Survey of Substance Abuse Treatment Services data from 2010 were used to examine geographic availability of facilities offering integration of mental health services in SAT programs in Los Angeles County, California. Using geographic information systems (GIS), service areas were constructed for each facility (N = 402 facilities; 104 offering integrated services) representing the surrounding area within a 10-minute drive. Spatial autocorrelation analyses were used to derive hot spots (or clusters) of census tracts with high concentrations of African American, Asian, Latino, and low-income households. Access to integrated care was reflected by the hot spot coverage of each facility, i.e., the proportion of its service area that overlapped with each type of hot spot.
GIS analysis suggested that ethnic and low-income communities have limited access to facilities offering integrated care; only one fourth of SAT providers offered integrated care. Regression analysis showed facilities whose service areas overlapped more with Latino hot spots were less likely to offer integrated care, as well as a potential interaction effect between Latino and high-poverty hot spots.
Despite significant pressure to enhance access to integrated services, ethnic and racial minority communities are disadvantaged in terms of proximity to this type of care. These findings can inform health care policy to increase geographic access to integrated care for the increasing number of clients with public health insurance.
在接受药物滥用治疗(SAT)的患者中,心理健康问题的高发率给治疗提供者带来了压力,促使他们开发出将药物滥用治疗与心理健康护理相结合的综合治疗方法。然而,综合治疗的可及性受到限制,仅在某些社区提供。在大城市中,少数民族和低收入社区可能无法获得所需的综合治疗。由于医疗改革的主要原则是扩大医疗保险范围,以覆盖低收入人群,从而提高获得治疗的机会,并减少少数民族之间的健康差距,因此,有必要了解在少数民族和低收入社区中,综合治疗在地理上的可及性程度。
利用 2010 年全国药物滥用治疗服务调查数据,在加利福尼亚州洛杉矶县,检查 SAT 项目中提供心理健康服务整合的设施在地理上的可获得性。使用地理信息系统(GIS),为每个设施(共 402 个设施;其中 104 个提供综合服务)构建了服务区域,代表 10 分钟车程范围内的周边地区。空间自相关分析用于确定具有高比例非裔美国人、亚裔、拉丁裔和低收入家庭的普查区的热点(或聚类)。通过每个设施的热点覆盖范围来反映综合治疗的可及性,即设施服务区域与每种热点类型重叠的比例。
GIS 分析表明,少数民族和低收入社区获得提供综合治疗的设施的机会有限;只有四分之一的 SAT 提供者提供综合治疗。回归分析显示,其服务区域与拉丁裔热点重叠较多的设施不太可能提供综合治疗,而且拉丁裔和高贫困热点之间存在潜在的交互效应。
尽管有很大的压力来增强对综合服务的可及性,但少数民族和种族群体在接近这种治疗方面处于劣势。这些发现可以为医疗保健政策提供信息,以增加具有公共医疗保险的越来越多的患者获得综合治疗的地理可及性。