Duke University.
Pacific Economic Research LLC.
Milbank Q. 2021 Sep;99(3):771-793. doi: 10.1111/1468-0009.12523. Epub 2021 Aug 10.
Policy Points Public funding for mental health programs must compete with other funding priorities in limited state budgets. Valuing state-funded mental health programs in a policy-relevant context requires consideration of how much benefit from other programs the public is willing to forgo to increase mental health program benefits and how much the public is willing to be taxed for such program benefits. Taxpayer resistance to increased taxes to pay for publicly funded mental health programs and perceived benefits of such programs vary with state population size. In all states, taxpayers seem to support increased public funding for mental health programs such as state Medicaid services, suggesting such programs are underfunded from the perspective of the average taxpayer.
The direct and indirect impacts of serious mental illness (SMI) on health care systems and communities represents a significant burden. However, the value that community members place on alleviating this burden is not known, and SMI treatment must compete with a long list of other publicly funded priorities. This study defines the value of public mental health interventions as what the public would accept, either in the form of higher taxes or in reductions in nonhealth programs, in return for increases in the number of mental health program beneficiaries.
We developed and fielded a best-practice discrete-choice experiment survey to quantify respondents' willingness to be taxed for increased spending among several competing programs, including a program for treating severe mental health conditions. A realistic decision frame was used to elicit respondents' willingness to support expanded state budgets for mental health programs if that expansion required either cuts in the competing publicly financed programs or tax increases. The survey was administered to a general population national sample of 10,000 respondents.
Nearly half the respondents in our sample either chose "no budget increase" for all budget scenarios or had preferences that were too disordered to estimate trade-off values. Including zero values for those respondents, we found that the mean (median) amount that all respondents were willing to be taxed annually for public mental health programs ranged between $156 ($99) per year for large-population states and $343 ($181) per year for small-population states. Respondents would accept reductions of between 1.6 and 3.4 beneficiaries in other programs in return for 1 additional mental health program beneficiary.
Our results are consistent with findings that a substantial portion of the US public is unwilling to pay higher taxes. Nevertheless, even including the substantial number of respondents who opposed any tax increase, the willingness of both the mean and median respondent to be taxed for mental health program expansions implies that programs providing mental health services such as state Medicaid are underfunded.
政策要点 公共资金必须用于心理健康计划,这在有限的州预算中必须与其他资金优先事项竞争。在相关政策背景下评估州立心理健康计划的价值需要考虑公众愿意放弃多少其他计划的利益来增加心理健康计划的利益,以及公众愿意为这些计划的利益缴纳多少税款。纳税人对增加税收以支付公共资助的心理健康计划的抵制以及对这些计划的感知收益因州人口规模而异。在所有州,纳税人似乎都支持增加对州医疗补助服务等心理健康计划的公共资金,这表明从普通纳税人的角度来看,这些计划的资金不足。
严重精神疾病(SMI)对医疗保健系统和社区的直接和间接影响带来了巨大负担。然而,社区成员减轻这种负担的价值尚不清楚,并且 SMI 治疗必须与一长串其他公共资助的优先事项竞争。本研究将公共心理健康干预措施的价值定义为公众愿意接受的价值,无论是以更高的税收形式还是以减少非健康计划的形式,以换取更多的心理健康计划受益人。
我们开发并进行了最佳实践离散选择实验调查,以量化受访者对增加几种竞争计划(包括治疗严重心理健康状况的计划)支出的纳税意愿。使用现实决策框架来征求受访者的意见,如果扩大精神健康计划的预算需要削减竞争的公共资助计划或增加税收,他们是否愿意支持扩大州预算。该调查针对 10000 名受访者的一般人群进行了全国性抽样。
我们样本中的近一半受访者要么选择“不增加所有预算方案的预算”,要么选择的偏好过于混乱而无法估计权衡值。包括对那些没有给出具体数字的受访者,我们发现,所有受访者愿意每年缴纳的用于公共心理健康计划的平均(中位数)金额在大州为 156 美元(99 美元),在小州为 343 美元(181 美元)。受访者愿意接受其他计划中的 1.6 至 3.4 名受益人减少,以换取额外的 1 名心理健康计划受益人。
我们的结果与发现一致,即很大一部分美国公众不愿意缴纳更高的税款。尽管如此,即使包括大量反对增税的受访者,平均和中位数受访者对心理健康计划扩大的纳税意愿表明,提供医疗补助等心理健康服务的计划资金不足。