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2008 年经济衰退后的精神科急诊:对四个美国州人口水平反应的生态考察。

Psychiatric Emergencies Following the 2008 Economic Recession: An Ecological Examination of Population-Level Responses in Four US States.

机构信息

University of California, Irvine, Anteater Instruction and Research Offices (AIRB), 653 E. Peltason Dr. Suite 2010, 2nd Floor, Irvine, CA 92697-3957, USA,

出版信息

J Ment Health Policy Econ. 2021 Mar 1;24(1):13-30.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Research examining mental health outcomes following economic downturns finds both pro-cyclic and counter-cyclic associations. Pro-cyclic findings (i.e. economic downturns correspond with decline in illnesses) invoke increase in leisure time and risk-averse behavior as underlying drivers of reduction in harmful consumption during economic recessions. By contrast, counter-cyclic evidence (i.e. economic downturns correspond with increase in illnesses) suggests increase in mental illness with economic decline owing to heightened stress and loss of resources, particularly among certain age and socioeconomic groups.

AIM OF THE STUDY

To examine the relation between monthly aggregate employment decline and psychiatric emergency department visits across 96 counties within 49 Metropolitan Statistical Areas in the United States.

METHODS

For this study, data on all psychiatric outpatient Emergency Department (ED) visits for 4 US states (Arizona, California, New Jersey and New York) were retrieved from the State Emergency Department Database (SEDD) and aggregated by county-month, for the time period of 2006 to 2011. Exposure to recession was operationalized as population-level employment change in a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA). This information was obtained from MSA-level employment provided by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Brief exposure time lags of 0 to 3 months were specified to estimate proximate responses to MSA-level economic decline. Income level was approximated based on insurance status (private insurance= high-income, public insurance = low-income). Linear regression analysis was used to test whether monthly decline in aggregate employment in an MSA corresponds with (i) changes in population rates of psychiatric ED visits and (ii) whether the relation between the outcome and exposure varies by insurance status (private, public) and age group (children, age < 20 years; working-age adults, age 20 to 64 years; elderly adults, age > 64 years). Regression methods controlled for region, year and month fixed effects, and state-specific linear time trends.

RESULTS

Linear regression results indicate that overall, psychiatric ED visits (per 100,000 population) decline with decline in monthly employment at exposure lag 0 (coefficient: 0.54, p < 0.001) and lag 2 (coefficient: 0.52, p < 0.001). Privately insured (high-income) groups also show a decline in psychiatric ED visits following decline in aggregate employment. Conversely, publicly insured children show an increase in psychiatric ED visit rates one month (i.e. lag 1) following employment decline (coefficient: -0.35, p value < 0.01). Exploratory analyses by disorder groups show that the population-level decline in psychiatric ED visits concentrates among visits for alcohol use disorders at 0, 1 and 2 month lags of employment decline.

DISCUSSION

This study's findings provide evidence of pro- as well as counter-cyclic trends in psychiatric emergency visits following aggregate employment decline in an MSA. Whereas declines in psychiatric emergencies support a risk-averse response to economic recessions, these aggregate trends may mask countervailing trends among vulnerable groups. Limitations of this study include the absence of sex-specific analyses and lack of information on emergent or non-emergent nature of psychiatric ED visits.

IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH CARE PROVISION AND USE

Psychiatric ED visits during recessions may vary by age and income groups.

IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH POLICIES

Findings from this study may serve to develop targeted policies for low-income groups during macroeconomic downturns.

IMPLICATIONS FOR FURTHER RESEARCH

Future research may examine trends in emergent versus non-emergent psychiatric ED visits following economic recessions.

摘要

背景

研究发现,经济衰退后心理健康状况存在顺周期性和逆周期性关联。顺周期性研究结果(即经济衰退与疾病减少相对应)认为,在经济衰退期间,休闲时间增加和风险规避行为是有害消费减少的潜在驱动因素。相比之下,逆周期性证据(即经济衰退与疾病增加相对应)表明,由于压力增加和资源丧失,尤其是在某些年龄和社会经济群体中,经济衰退会导致精神疾病增加。

目的

研究美国 49 个大都市统计区的 96 个县的每月总就业人数下降与精神科急诊就诊之间的关系。

方法

在这项研究中,从州急诊数据库(SEDD)中检索了美国 4 个州(亚利桑那州、加利福尼亚州、新泽西州和纽约州)的所有精神科门诊急诊就诊数据,并按县-月进行汇总,时间范围为 2006 年至 2011 年。经济衰退的暴露被定义为大都市统计区(MSA)的人口就业变化。这一信息是从美国劳工统计局提供的 MSA 就业数据中获得的。指定了 0 到 3 个月的短暂时间滞后,以估计对 MSA 经济衰退的近似反应。收入水平根据保险状况(私人保险=高收入,公共保险=低收入)进行近似。使用线性回归分析来检验 MSA 级别的总就业逐月下降是否与(i)人口精神病急诊就诊率的变化和(ii)结果与暴露之间的关系是否因保险状况(私人、公共)和年龄组(儿童,年龄<20 岁;工作年龄成年人,年龄 20 至 64 岁;老年人,年龄>64 岁)而异。回归方法控制了地区、年份和月份的固定效应,以及州特定的线性时间趋势。

结果

线性回归结果表明,总体而言,精神病急诊就诊率(每 10 万人)在暴露滞后 0(系数:0.54,p<0.001)和滞后 2(系数:0.52,p<0.001)时随每月就业的下降而下降。私人保险(高收入)群体在总就业下降后也表现出精神病急诊就诊率下降。相反,公共保险的儿童在就业下降后一个月(即滞后 1)精神病急诊就诊率上升(系数:-0.35,p 值<0.01)。按疾病组进行的探索性分析表明,精神病急诊就诊率的人群水平下降集中在酒精使用障碍的就诊上,在就业下降的 0、1 和 2 个月滞后时。

讨论

本研究结果提供了证据,表明在 MSA 中总就业下降后精神病急诊就诊存在顺周期和逆周期趋势。尽管精神病急诊就诊减少支持了对经济衰退的风险规避反应,但这些总体趋势可能掩盖了弱势群体中相反的趋势。本研究的局限性包括缺乏性别特异性分析以及缺乏关于精神病急诊就诊的紧急或非紧急性质的信息。

对医疗保健提供和使用的影响

经济衰退期间的精神病急诊就诊可能因年龄和收入群体而异。

对卫生政策的影响

本研究的结果可能有助于在宏观经济衰退期间为低收入群体制定有针对性的政策。

对进一步研究的影响

未来的研究可以研究经济衰退后急诊和非急诊精神病急诊就诊的趋势。

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