Oak Ridge Institute for Science and, Education (ORISE), Oak Ridge, TN, 37831, USA,
J Ment Health Policy Econ. 2023 Mar 1;26(1):19-32.
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) aimed to expand mental health service use in the US, by expanding access to health insurance. However, the gap in mental health utilization by race and ethnicity is pronounced: members of racial and ethnic minoritized groups remain less likely to use mental health services than non-Hispanic White individuals even after the ACA.
This study assessed the effect of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) on mental health services use in one large state (California), and whether that effect differed among racial and ethnic groups. Also, it tested for change in racial and ethnic disparities after the implementation of the ACA, using four measures of mental health care.
Using pooled California Health Interview Survey (CHIS) data from 2011-2018, logistic regression and Generalized Linear Models (GLM) were estimated. Disparities were defined using the Institute of Medicine (IOM) definition. Primary outcomes were any mental health care in primary settings; in specialty settings, any prescription medication for mental health problems, and number of annual visits to mental health services.
Findings suggested that the change in Hispanic-non-Hispanic White disparities in prescription medication use under the ACA was statistically significant, narrowing the gap by 7.23 percentage points (p<.05). However, the disparity in other measures was not significantly reduced.
These findings suggest that the magnitude of the increase in primary and specialty mental health services among racial and ethnic minorities was not large enough to significantly reduce racial and ethnic disparities. One possible explanation is that non-financial factors played a role, such as language barriers, attitudinal barriers from home culture norms, and systemic barriers due to mental health professional shortages and a limited number of mental health care providers of color.
Integrated approaches that coordinate specialty and primary care mental health services may be needed to promote mental healthcare access for members of racial and ethnic minoritized groups.
Federal and state policies aiming to improve mental health services use have historically given more weight to financial determinants, but this has not been enough to significantly reduce racial/ethnic disparities. Thus, policies should pay more attention to non-financial determinants.
Assessing underlying mechanisms of non-financial factors that moderate the effectiveness of the ACA is a worthwhile goal for future research. Future studies should examine the extent to which non-financial factors intervene in the relationship between the implementation of the ACA and mental health services use.
《平价医疗法案》(ACA)旨在通过扩大医疗保险的覆盖范围来增加美国的精神卫生服务利用。然而,种族和民族之间在精神卫生利用方面的差距仍然很大:即使在 ACA 之后,少数族裔群体的成员使用精神卫生服务的可能性仍低于非西班牙裔白人。
本研究评估了《平价医疗法案》(ACA)在一个大州(加利福尼亚州)对精神卫生服务利用的影响,以及这种影响在不同种族和族裔群体之间是否存在差异。此外,它还使用了四项精神卫生保健措施,检验了 ACA 实施后种族和民族差异的变化。
利用 2011-2018 年加利福尼亚州健康访谈调查(CHIS)的汇总数据,采用逻辑回归和广义线性模型(GLM)进行估计。差异是根据医学研究所(IOM)的定义来定义的。主要结果是在初级环境中进行任何精神卫生保健;在专科环境中,任何用于精神健康问题的处方药物,以及每年接受精神卫生服务的次数。
研究结果表明,ACA 下西班牙裔-非西班牙裔白人在处方药物使用方面的差异有所缩小,这一变化在统计学上具有显著性,缩小了 7.23 个百分点(p<.05)。然而,其他措施的差异并没有显著减少。
这些发现表明,少数族裔在初级和专科精神卫生服务方面的增长幅度不足以显著减少种族和民族差异。一个可能的解释是,非财务因素发挥了作用,例如语言障碍、家庭文化规范的态度障碍,以及由于精神卫生专业人员短缺和少数族裔精神卫生服务提供者数量有限而导致的系统障碍。
需要采取综合方法,协调专科和初级保健精神卫生服务,以促进少数族裔成员获得精神卫生保健。
历史上,旨在提高精神卫生服务利用率的联邦和州政策更注重财务决定因素,但这还不足以显著减少种族/民族差异。因此,政策应该更加关注非财务决定因素。
评估非财务因素在调节 ACA 有效性方面的潜在机制,是未来研究的一个有价值的目标。未来的研究应该研究非财务因素在 ACA 实施与精神卫生服务利用之间的关系中干预的程度。