A Prospective Examination of Service Use by Abused and Neglected Children Followed Up Into Adulthood

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A Prospective Examination of Service Use by Abused and Neglected Children Followed Up Into Adulthood

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  • Cite Count Icon 8
  • 10.1176/appi.ps.60.9.1222
The Role of Social Network and Support in Mental Health Service Use: Findings From the Baltimore ECA Study
  • Sep 1, 2009
  • Psychiatric Services
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The Role of Social Network and Support in Mental Health Service Use: Findings From the Baltimore ECA Study

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  • 10.1176/appi.ps.60.3.358
Predictors of Likelihood and Intensity of Past-Year Mental Health Service Use in an Active Canadian Military Sample
  • Mar 1, 2009
  • Psychiatric Services
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Predictors of Likelihood and Intensity of Past-Year Mental Health Service Use in an Active Canadian Military Sample

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  • 10.1176/appi.ps.58.12.1555
Initiation and Use of Public Mental Health Services by Persons With Severe Mental Illness and Limited English Proficiency
  • Dec 1, 2007
  • Psychiatric Services
  • T P Gilmer + 5 more

Initiation and Use of Public Mental Health Services by Persons With Severe Mental Illness and Limited English Proficiency

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  • 10.1176/appi.ps.58.1.63-a
Do Canada and the United States Differ in Prevalence of Depression and Utilization of Services?
  • Jan 1, 2007
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Do Canada and the United States Differ in Prevalence of Depression and Utilization of Services?

  • Research Article
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  • 10.1176/ajp.156.8.1250
Shifting to outpatient care? Mental health care use and cost under private insurance.
  • Aug 1, 1999
  • American Journal of Psychiatry
  • Douglas L Leslie + 1 more

Concern over rising health care costs has put pressure on providers to reduce costs, purportedly by reducing inpatient care and increasing outpatient care. Inpatient and outpatient claims were analyzed for adult users of mental health services (180,000/year on average) from a national study group of 3.9 million privately insured individuals per year from 1993 to 1995. Costs and treatment days per patient were compared across diagnostic groups and stratified by whether patients were hospitalized. Inpatient mental health costs fell $2,507 (30.4%) over the period, driven primarily by decreases in hospital days per patient per year (19.9%), with smaller changes in the proportion of enrollees who received inpatient care (increase of 0.8%) and a decrease in per diem costs (9.1%). Outpatient mental health costs also declined over the period, falling 13.6% for patients also using inpatient services and 14.6% for patients receiving only outpatient care. Patients whose primary diagnosis was mild to moderate depression saw the largest decreases in inpatient cost per patient (42.8%); those diagnosed with schizophrenia experienced the smallest decrease (23.5%). For patients using outpatient services only, those diagnosed with substance abuse experienced the largest decrease in costs (23.5%); those diagnosed with schizophrenia experienced the smallest decrease (8.6%). Substantial cost reductions for mental health services are primarily a result of reductions in inpatient and outpatient treatment days. Declines in inpatient service use were not accompanied by increases in outpatient service use, even for severely ill patients requiring hospitalization. Managed care has not caused a shift in the pattern of care but an overall reduction of care.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 66
  • 10.1176/ps.2010.61.1.17
Mental Health Service Use Among Suicidal Adolescents: Findings From a U.S. National Community Survey
  • Jan 1, 2010
  • Psychiatric Services
  • Ping Wu + 4 more

This study assessed patterns of mental health service use among adolescents who had attempted suicide and examined factors associated with their service use at individual, family, and community levels. Bivariate and multiple logistic regression analyses were conducted with data from 877 adolescents aged 12-17 who had attempted suicide in the past 12 months and who participated in the 2000 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse. Of the 877 adolescents, less than half (45%) reported that they had used mental health services in the past 12 months. Adolescents from racial-ethnic minority groups were less likely than whites to receive inpatient or outpatient mental health treatment, even when the analyses controlled for other demographic, individual, and family and community characteristics. Poor self-perceived health and living in a single-parent family were associated with use of inpatient services. Female gender, higher family income, participation in extracurricular activities, and the presence of symptoms of anxiety or disruptive disorders were associated with use of outpatient services. Use of school-based mental health services was associated only with participation in extracurricular activities. The mental health service needs of suicidal adolescents, especially those from ethnic minority groups and lower-income families, too frequently remain unmet. Larger racial-ethnic disparities were found in use of inpatient and outpatient mental health services than in use of school-based services. Mental health services offered within school settings can reach suicidal adolescents who need services but may experience barriers to standard types of care.

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  • Cite Count Icon 8
  • 10.1176/appi.ps.201400246
Relationship Between General Illness and Mental Health Service Use and Expenditures Among Racially-Ethnically Diverse Adults ≥65 Years.
  • Mar 16, 2015
  • Psychiatric Services
  • Daniel E Jimenez + 6 more

The association of general medical illness and mental health service use among older adults from racial-ethnic minority groups is an important area of study given the disparities in mental health and general medical services and the low use of mental health services in this population. The purpose of this report is to describe the impact of comorbid general medical illness on mental health service use and expenditures among older adults and to evaluate disparities in mental health service use and expenditures in a racially-ethnically diverse sample of older adults with and without comorbid general medical illness. Data were obtained from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (years 2004-2011). The sample included 1,563 whites, 519 African Americans, and 642 Latinos (N=2,724) age ≥65 with probable mental illness. Two-part generalized linear models were used to estimate and compare mental health service use among adults with and without a comorbid general medical illness. Mental health service use was more likely for older adults with comorbid general medical illness than for those without it. Once mental health services were accessed, no differences in mental health expenditures were found. Comorbid general medical illness increased the likelihood of mental health service use by older whites and Latinos. However, the presence of comorbidity did not affect racial-ethnic disparities in mental health service use. This study highlighted the important role of comorbid general medical illness as a potential contributor to using mental health services and suggests intervention strategies to enhance engagement in mental health services by older adults from racial-ethnic minority groups.

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  • Cite Count Icon 48
  • 10.1176/ps.2010.61.8.796
A Prospective Examination of Service Use by Abused and Neglected Children Followed Up Into Adulthood
  • Aug 1, 2010
  • Psychiatric Services
  • Philip T Yanos + 2 more

This study sought to determine whether abused and neglected children are more likely than those without childhood maltreatment to use health and social services as adults and whether psychiatric status mediates or moderates the relationship. A prospective cohort design was used. Individuals with documented cases of physical and sexual abuse and neglect (ages 0-10) and nonvictimized children matched on age, sex, and race-ethnicity were interviewed in adulthood (mean age 41 years). Past-year service use (general medical, mental health, substance abuse, and social) was assessed during 2003-2004 interviews (maltreated group, N=458; control group, N=349). Psychiatric status (posttraumatic stress disorder [PTSD], drug abuse, and major depressive disorder) was assessed during 1989-1995 (mean age 29) by structured interview. Individuals with histories of childhood abuse and neglect were significantly more likely than their control group counterparts to use mental health services (odds ratio [OR]=1.60, 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.04-2.45) and social services (OR=2.95, CI=2.19-3.97) in adulthood. Psychiatric status in young adulthood (PTSD and major depressive disorder) partially mediated the relationship between childhood maltreatment and use of mental health services, whereas major depression and drug abuse moderated the relationship between maltreatment and use of any services and general medical services. In adulthood, individuals with documented histories of childhood abuse and neglect are more likely than persons without such histories to use some types of services, and psychiatric status mediates and moderates these relationships. Findings have implications for the provision of services to persons with childhood abuse and neglect.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 33
  • 10.1176/appi.ps.201500305
Expedited Medicaid Enrollment, Mental Health Service Use, and Criminal Recidivism Among Released Prisoners With Severe Mental Illness.
  • Mar 15, 2016
  • Psychiatric Services
  • Joseph P Morrissey + 2 more

This study investigated whether Washington State's 2006 policy of expediting Medicaid enrollment for offenders with severe mental illness released from state prisons increased Medicaid access and use of community mental health services while decreasing criminal recidivism. A quasi-experimental design with linked administrative data was used to select all prisoners with a severe mental illness (schizophrenia or bipolar disorder) released during the policy's first two years (January 1, 2006, through December 31, 2007), and those referred for expedited Medicaid (N=895) were separated from a propensity-weighted control group of those not referred (N=2,191). Measures included binary indicators of Medicaid enrollment, other public insurance enrollment, postrelease use of inpatient and outpatient health services, and any postrelease criminal justice contacts. All data were collapsed to person-level observations during the 12 months after the index release, and outcomes were estimated via propensity-weighted logit models. Referral for expedited Medicaid on release from prison greatly increased Medicaid enrollment (p<.01) and use of community mental health and general medical services (p<.01) for persons with severe mental illness. No evidence was found that expediting Medicaid reduced criminal recidivism. Expediting Medicaid was associated with increased Medicaid enrollment and both mental health and general medical service use, but study findings strongly suggest that rather than relying on indirect spillover effects from Medicaid to reduce criminal recidivism, advocates and policy makers would better address the needs of offenders with severe mental illness through direct interventions targeted at underlying causes of recidivism.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 133
  • 10.1176/ps.2009.60.9.1222
The Role of Social Network and Support in Mental Health Service Use: Findings From the Baltimore ECA Study
  • Sep 1, 2009
  • Psychiatric Services
  • Pallab K Maulik + 2 more

A significant number of people with mental illness do not use mental health services to receive treatment for their symptoms. This study examined the hypothesis that social network and social support affect mental health service use. Data were from the Baltimore cohort of the Epidemiologic Catchment Area study, a prospective cohort study that gathered data over four time points. This study examined data gathered in 1993-1996 (N=1,920) and 2004-2005 (N=1,071). The study examined indicators of social network and social support in relation to four types of service use (general medical, mental health within general medical, specialty psychiatric, and other human services) with multivariate logistic regression. Examples of other human services include a self-help group or crisis center for help with any psychological problem. Weighted generalized estimating equations were used for the analyses. Among persons with major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, or alcohol use disorder in the past year or psychological distress in the past few weeks, general medical service use was reduced when the frequency of contact with relatives or friends occurred less than daily, but it was increased by about 40% when there was a higher than median level of spousal support. In contrast, receiving general medical services for mental health problems was reduced by about 50% when there was a higher than median level of social support from relatives. Specialty psychiatric service use was reduced when there was regular contact with six or more relatives and there was a higher than median level of social support from friends and relatives. None of the social network or social support measures were significantly (p</=.01) associated with use of other human services. Increased contact with the social network and higher levels of social support were associated with greater use of general medical services. However, more social support was associated with use of fewer services within the specialty psychiatric sector.

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  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 7
  • 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1123361
Examining mental health knowledge, stigma, and service use intentions among Royal Canadian Mounted Police cadets.
  • May 2, 2023
  • Frontiers in Psychology
  • Katie L Andrews + 9 more

Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) officers experience an elevated risk for mental health disorders due to inherent work-related exposures to potentially psychologically traumatic events and occupational stressors. RCMP officers also report high levels of stigma and low levels of intentions to seek mental health services. In contrast, very little is known about the levels of mental health knowledge and stigma of RCMP cadets starting the Cadet Training Program (CTP). The current study was designed to: (1) obtain baseline levels of mental health knowledge, stigma against peers in the workplace, and service use intentions in RCMP cadets; (2) determine the relationship among mental health knowledge, stigma against peers in the workplace, and service use intentions among RCMP cadets; (3) examine differences across sociodemographic characteristics; and (4) compare cadets to a sample of previously surveyed serving RCMP. Participants were RCMP cadets (n = 772) starting the 26-week CTP. Cadets completed questionnaires assessing mental health knowledge, stigma against coworkers with mental health challenges, and mental health service use intentions. RCMP cadets reported statistically significantly lower levels of mental health knowledge (d = 0.233) and stigma (d = 0.127), and higher service use intentions (d = 0.148) than serving RCMP (all ps < 0.001). Female cadets reported statistically significantly higher scores on mental health knowledge and service use and lower scores on stigma compared to male cadets. Mental health knowledge and service use intentions were statistically significantly positively associated. For the total sample, stigma was inversely statistically significantly associated with mental health knowledge and service use intentions. The current results indicate that higher levels of mental health knowledge were associated with lower stigma and higher intention to use professional mental health services. Differences between cadets and serving RCMP highlight the need for regular ongoing training starting from the CTP, designed to reduce stigma and increase mental health knowledge. Differences between male and female cadets suggest differential barriers to help-seeking behaviors. The current results provide a baseline to monitor cadet mental health knowledge and service use intentions and stigma as they progress throughout their careers.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1007/s10903-025-01810-x
Caregiver-Reported Barriers To Mental Health Service Use for Asian American Youth.
  • Nov 1, 2025
  • Journal of immigrant and minority health
  • Amy Hyoeun Lee + 2 more

Asian American (AsAm) youth experience persistent disparities in mental health service use, but quantitative data are lacking in existing investigations of barriers in this population. Here, we sought to characterize key barriers to youth mental health services across multiple domains (i.e., structural, perceptual, cultural, trauma-specific) and explore associations between barriers, youth symptoms, and service use. AsAm caregivers (N = 149, Mage = 39.23, 55% female) completed the study online, reporting on barriers, youth psychopathology, and past-year service use. Caregivers reported significant barriers to seeking youth mental health services in each barrier domain. For youth mental health needs, caregivers reported using medical services most frequently, followed by school-based care and therapy/counseling. Caregivers of youth with clinically significant symptoms (clinical subgroup; n = 51) endorsed barriers more frequently compared to caregivers of youth without (n = 98), and unique key barriers emerged in the clinical subgroup. In the overall sample, mean barrier scores were positively correlated with perceived need for therapy and school-based support services, but not with medical support services. Barrier scores were positively correlated with past-year use of school-based support services, but not with therapy or medical services. Finally, barriers were significantly correlated with youth mental health symptoms, suggesting that caregivers of youth with more severe symptoms perceived more barriers to care. Addressing culturally relevant barriers, in addition to universal barriers, could improve access and engagement with mental health services for AsAm youth. Further research is needed to replicate and generalize these findings to broader samples of AsAm youth and caregivers.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 4
  • 10.1176/appi.ajgp.11.5.525
Patterns of Public Mental Health Service Use by Age in Patients With Schizophrenia
  • Oct 1, 2003
  • American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry
  • H Jin

Patterns of Public Mental Health Service Use by Age in Patients With Schizophrenia

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 11
  • 10.1176/appi.ps.60.2.210
Treatment Patterns for Schizoaffective Disorder and Schizophrenia Among Medicaid Patients
  • Feb 1, 2009
  • Psychiatric Services
  • Mark Olfson + 2 more

Treatment Patterns for Schizoaffective Disorder and Schizophrenia Among Medicaid Patients

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 53
  • 10.1176/ps.2009.60.2.210
Treatment Patterns for Schizoaffective Disorder and Schizophrenia Among Medicaid Patients
  • Feb 1, 2009
  • Psychiatric Services
  • Mark Olfson + 2 more

This study compared background characteristics, pharmacologic treatment, and service use of adults treated for schizoaffective disorder and adults treated for schizophrenia. Medicaid claims data from two states were analyzed with a focus on adults treated for schizoaffective disorder or schizophrenia. Patient groups were compared regarding demographic characteristics, pharmacologic treatment, and health service use during 180 days before and after a claim for either schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. A larger proportion of patients were treated for schizophrenia (N=38,760; 70.1%) than for schizoaffective disorder (N=16,570; 29.9%). During the 180 days before the index diagnosis claim, significantly more patients with schizoaffective disorder than those with schizophrenia were treated for depressive disorder (19.6% versus 11.4%, p<.001), bipolar disorder (14.8% versus 5.8%, p<.001), substance use disorder (11.8% versus 9.7%, p<.001), and anxiety disorder (6.9% versus 5.3%, p<.001). After the index claim, a similar proportion of both diagnostic groups were treated with antipsychotic medications (schizoaffective disorder, 87.3%; schizophrenia, 87.0%), although patients with schizoaffective disorder were significantly more likely than patients with schizophrenia to receive antidepressants (61.7% versus 44.0%, p<.001), mood stabilizers (55.2% versus 34.4%, p<.001), and anxiolytics (43.2% versus 35.1%, p<.001). Patients with schizoaffective disorder were also significantly more likely than patients with schizophrenia to receive psychotherapy (23.4% versus 13.0%, p<.001) and inpatient mental health care (9.4% versus 6.2%, p<.001), although the latter was not significant after the analysis controlled for background characteristics. Schizoaffective disorder is commonly diagnosed among Medicaid beneficiaries. These patients often receive complex pharmacologic regimens, and many also receive treatment for mood disorders. Differences in service use patterns between schizoaffective disorder and schizophrenia argue for separate consideration of their health care needs.

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