Department of Health Management and Policy, Dornsife School of Public Health, Drexel University, Philadelphia (Purtle, Nelson); Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, New York University School of Medicine, New York City (Horwitz, Hoagwood); Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work, University of Southern California, Los Angeles (Palinkas); Brown School, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis (McKay).
Psychiatr Serv. 2022 Apr 1;73(4):381-387. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.202100176. Epub 2021 Jul 29.
Mental health agencies provide critical safety net services for youths. No research has assessed impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on services these agencies provide or youths they serve. This study sought to characterize agency officials' perceptions of the pandemic's impacts on youths and challenges to providing youth services during the pandemic and to examine associations between these challenges and impacts.
Surveys were completed in September-October 2020 by 159 state or county mental health agency officials from 46 states. Respondents used 7-point scales (higher rating indicated more severe impact or challenge) to rate the pandemic's impact on youth mental health issues, general service challenges, and telepsychiatry service challenges across patient, provider, and financing domains. Multiple linear regression models estimated associations between service challenges (independent variables) and pandemic impacts (dependent variables).
Most agency officials perceived the pandemic as having disproportionately negative mental health impacts on socially disadvantaged youths (serious impact, 72%; mean rating=5.85). Only 15% (mean=4.29) perceived the pandemic as having a seriously negative impact on receipt of needed youth services. Serious service challenges were related to youths' lack of reliable equipment or Internet access for telepsychiatry services (serious challenge, 59%; mean=5.47) and the inability to provide some services remotely (serious challenge, 42%, mean=4.72). In regression models, the inability to provide some services remotely was significantly (p≤0.01) associated with three of five pandemic impacts.
Officials perceived the COVID-19 pandemic as exacerbating youth mental health disparities but as not having a dramatic impact on receipt of needed services.
心理健康机构为青少年提供重要的安全网服务。目前尚无研究评估 COVID-19 大流行对这些机构提供的服务或服务对象青少年的影响。本研究旨在描述机构官员对大流行对青少年的影响以及在大流行期间提供青少年服务的挑战的看法,并探讨这些挑战与影响之间的关联。
2020 年 9 月至 10 月,来自 46 个州的 159 名州或县心理健康机构官员完成了调查。受访者使用 7 点量表(评分越高表示影响或挑战越严重),对大流行对青少年心理健康问题、一般服务挑战以及患者、提供者和融资领域的远程精神病学服务挑战对青年的影响进行评分。多元线性回归模型估计了服务挑战(自变量)与大流行影响(因变量)之间的关联。
大多数机构官员认为,大流行对社会弱势群体的青少年心理健康产生了不成比例的负面影响(严重影响,72%;平均评分为 5.85)。只有 15%(平均评分为 4.29)的人认为大流行对获得所需青年服务产生了严重的负面影响。严重的服务挑战与青少年远程精神病学服务缺乏可靠的设备或互联网接入有关(严重挑战,59%;平均评分为 5.47),以及无法远程提供某些服务(严重挑战,42%,平均评分为 4.72)。在回归模型中,无法远程提供某些服务与五项大流行影响中的三项显著相关(p≤0.01)。
官员认为 COVID-19 大流行加剧了青少年心理健康方面的差距,但对获得所需服务没有产生巨大影响。