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J Ment Health Policy Econ. 2021 Dec 1;24(4):117-124.
Certificate of need (CON) laws require would-be healthcare providers to obtain the permission of a state board before opening or expanding. 35 US states operate some type of CON program, though they vary widely in the specific services or equipment they target, with 25 states requiring CON for psychiatric services.
We provide the first empirical estimates on how CON affects the provision of psychiatric services.
We use Ordinary Least Squares regression to analyze 2010-2016 data on psychiatric CON from the American Health Planning Association together with data on psychiatric facilities and services from the National Mental Health Services Survey.
We find that CON laws targeting psychiatric services are associated with a statistically significant 0.527 fewer psychiatric hospitals per million residents (20% fewer) and 2.19 fewer inpatient psychiatric clients per ten thousand residents (56% fewer). Psychiatric CON is also associated with psychiatric hospitals being 5.35 percentage points less likely to accept Medicare. Our estimates for CON's effect on the number of inpatient psychiatric beds per ten thousand residents and the likelihood of psychiatric hospitals accepting Medicaid, private insurance, or charity care (no charge) are negative but not statistically significant.
CON laws may substantially reduce access to psychiatric care. A limitation of our study is that there is almost no variation in which states have psychiatric-related CON laws during the time period of our data (New Hampshire is the only state to change its psychiatric services CON requirement in this period, repealing its CON program entirely in 2016). This precludes the use of preferred econometric techniques such as difference-in-difference.
Our results indicate that CON laws may reduce access to inpatient psychiatric care. State policymakers should consider whether CON repeal could be a simple way of enhancing access to psychiatric care.
While hundreds of articles have examined the effects of CON laws, we believe ours is the first to provide empirical estimates of their effects on mental health care specifically. We hope it is not the last.
需求证明(CON)法要求潜在的医疗服务提供者在开设或扩大之前获得州委员会的许可。美国 35 个州都有某种类型的 CON 计划,尽管它们在目标具体服务或设备方面差异很大,其中 25 个州要求对精神科服务进行 CON。
我们提供了有关 CON 如何影响精神科服务提供的首次实证估计。
我们使用普通最小二乘法分析了 2010-2016 年美国健康规划协会的精神科 CON 数据,以及国家心理健康服务调查的精神科设施和服务数据。
我们发现,针对精神科服务的 CON 法与每百万居民减少 0.527 家精神病院(减少 20%)和每千名居民减少 2.19 名住院精神科患者(减少 56%)具有统计学意义。精神科 CON 还与精神病院接受医疗保险的可能性降低 5.35 个百分点相关。我们对 CON 对每千名居民住院精神科床位数量和精神病院接受医疗补助、私人保险或慈善护理(免费)的可能性的影响的估计为负,但没有统计学意义。
CON 法可能会大大降低获得精神科护理的机会。我们研究的一个限制是,在我们的数据期间,几乎没有哪个州有与精神科相关的 CON 法的变化(新罕布什尔州是本期间唯一一个改变其精神科服务 CON 要求的州,于 2016 年完全废除了其 CON 计划)。这排除了使用差分差异等首选计量经济学技术的可能性。
我们的结果表明,CON 法可能会降低获得住院精神科护理的机会。州政策制定者应考虑是否取消 CON 可能是简单地增加获得精神科护理的途径。
虽然已经有数百篇文章研究了 CON 法的影响,但我们相信我们的研究是第一个专门针对其对精神卫生保健的影响提供实证估计的研究。我们希望这不是最后一个。