Heinrich Carolyn J, Shero Mason, Fry Carrie E
Department of Leadership, Policy and Organizations, Vanderbilt University, USA.
Data Analytics, Denison University, USA.
SSM Ment Health. 2025 Jun;7. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmmh.2025.100421. Epub 2025 Mar 6.
About two in five children and adolescents will meet the criteria for a mental disorder by age 18, and more than half of youth who are accessing mental health services receive them in an educational setting. Yet there is limited evidence on the effectiveness of school-based interventions on children's mental health and education outcomes. We examine the effectiveness of two key United States' federally-funded interventions for expanding school-based capacities to improve children's health and education outcomes-School-Based Health Centers (SBHCs) and Advancing Wellness and Resiliency in Education (AWARE) grants-in a mixed method, longitudinal study of low-income, Tennessee children. We linked health insurance claims data for children enrolled in Tennessee's Medicaid program with administrative education records for students attending Tennessee public schools between 2006 and 2019. We also implemented a census of Tennessee school districts to determine which had SBHCs and AWARE grants and their start years, and we conducted semi-structured interviews with each treated district to assess their infrastructure, programs, staffing, partnerships, health services offered, and more. We estimated effects of SBHCs and AWARE grants on school-level rates of mental health conditions, behavioral health conditions, preventive health care visits, absences, chronic absences, and disciplinary incidents using a staggered adoption, difference-indifferences (DiD) approach. We found a statistically significant reduction in diagnosed mental health conditions among treated schools of 6 percent relative to their baseline prevalence, which our qualitative findings suggest might be related to increased health staffing in schools, earlier detection of mental health needs, and greater use of prevention strategies. We saw larger effects in some school districts with more extensive mental health infrastructure. We did not satisfy model assumptions for estimating causal effects on preventive health care visits, absences, chronic absences, and disciplinary incidents, although associations were in the expected direction.
约五分之二的儿童和青少年到18岁时将符合精神障碍的标准,超过半数接受心理健康服务的青少年是在教育环境中获得这些服务的。然而,关于以学校为基础的干预措施对儿童心理健康和教育成果有效性的证据有限。我们在一项针对田纳西州低收入儿童的混合方法纵向研究中,考察了美国两项由联邦政府资助的关键干预措施——学校健康中心(SBHCs)和推进教育中的健康与恢复力(AWARE)拨款——在扩大以学校为基础的能力以改善儿童健康和教育成果方面的有效性。我们将田纳西州医疗补助计划参保儿童的医疗保险理赔数据与2006年至2019年期间就读于田纳西州公立学校学生的行政管理教育记录相链接。我们还对田纳西州的学区进行了普查,以确定哪些学区有学校健康中心和推进教育中的健康与恢复力拨款及其起始年份,并对每个接受干预的学区进行了半结构化访谈,以评估其基础设施、项目、人员配备、伙伴关系、提供的健康服务等。我们使用交错采用的双重差分(DiD)方法,估计了学校健康中心和推进教育中的健康与恢复力拨款对学校层面心理健康状况、行为健康状况、预防性医疗保健就诊、缺勤、长期缺勤和纪律事件发生率的影响。我们发现,与基线患病率相比,接受干预学校中确诊的心理健康状况在统计学上显著降低了6%,我们的定性研究结果表明,这可能与学校健康工作人员增加、心理健康需求的早期发现以及预防策略的更多使用有关。我们在一些心理健康基础设施更完善的学区看到了更大的效果。尽管关联方向符合预期,但我们并未满足估计对预防性医疗保健就诊、缺勤、长期缺勤和纪律事件因果效应的模型假设。