Jones Audrey L, Cochran Susan D, Leibowitz Arleen, Wells Kenneth B, Kominski Gerald, Mays Vickie M
Informatics, Decision-Enhancement and Analytic Sciences Center (IDEAS 2.0), VA Salt Lake City Health Care System, Salt Lake City, UT 84148, USA.
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT 84132, USA.
Healthcare (Basel). 2018 Mar 22;6(2):29. doi: 10.3390/healthcare6020029.
Black and Latino minorities have traditionally had poorer access to primary care than non-Latino Whites, but these patterns could change with the Affordable Care Act (ACA). To guide post-ACA efforts to address mental health service disparities, we used a nationally representative sample to characterize baseline race-, ethnicity-, and nativity-associated differences in mental health services in the context of primary care.
Data were obtained from the Medical Expenditures Panel Survey (MEPS), a two-year panel study of healthcare use, satisfaction with care, and costs of services in the United States (US). We pooled data from six waves (14-19) of participants with serious psychological distress to examine racial, ethnic, and nativity disparities in medical and mental health visits to primary care (PC) and specialty mental health (SMH) providers around the time of ACA reforms, 2010-2015.
Of the 2747 respondents with serious psychological distress, 1316 were non-Latino White, 632 non-Latino Black, 532 identified as Latino with Mexican, Central American, or South American (MCS) origins, and 267 as Latino with Caribbean island origins; 525 were foreign/island born. All racial/ethnic groups were less likely than non-Latino Whites to have any PC visit. Of those who used PC, non-Latino Blacks were less likely than Whites to have a PC mental health visit, while foreign born MCS Latinos were less likely to visit an SMH provider. Conditional on any mental health visit, Latinos from the Caribbean were more likely than non-Latino Whites to visit SMH providers versus PC providers only, while non-Latino Blacks and US born MCS Latinos received fewer PC mental health visits than non-Latino Whites.
Racial-, ethnic-, and nativity-associated disparities persist in PC provided mental health services.
传统上,黑人及拉丁裔少数族裔比非拉丁裔白人获得初级保健的机会更少,但这些模式可能会因《平价医疗法案》(ACA)而改变。为指导《平价医疗法案》实施后解决心理健康服务差距的工作,我们使用了一个具有全国代表性的样本,以描述在初级保健背景下,心理健康服务方面与种族、族裔和出生地相关的基线差异。
数据来自医疗支出面板调查(MEPS),这是一项对美国医疗保健使用情况、对医疗的满意度以及服务成本进行的为期两年的面板研究。我们汇总了六轮(第14 - 19轮)有严重心理困扰的参与者的数据,以研究2010 - 2015年《平价医疗法案》改革前后,在初级保健(PC)和专科心理健康(SMH)机构进行医疗和心理健康就诊方面的种族、族裔和出生地差异。
在2747名有严重心理困扰的受访者中,1316人为非拉丁裔白人,632人为非拉丁裔黑人,532人被认定为具有墨西哥、中美洲或南美洲(MCS)血统的拉丁裔,267人被认定为具有加勒比岛屿血统的拉丁裔;525人为外国出生或岛民出身。所有种族/族裔群体进行任何初级保健就诊的可能性均低于非拉丁裔白人。在使用初级保健的人群中,非拉丁裔黑人进行初级保健心理健康就诊的可能性低于白人,而外国出生的MCS拉丁裔就诊专科心理健康机构的可能性较低。在进行任何心理健康就诊的条件下,来自加勒比地区的拉丁裔仅就诊专科心理健康机构而非初级保健机构的可能性高于非拉丁裔白人,而非拉丁裔黑人和美国出生的MCS拉丁裔进行初级保健心理健康就诊的次数少于非拉丁裔白人。
在初级保健提供的心理健康服务中,与种族、族裔和出生地相关的差距依然存在。