Abstract

BackgroundThe Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act increased funding for integrated care to improve access to quality health care among underserved populations. There is evidence that integrated care decreases inequities in access and quality of mental health care among Hispanic clients. Increasing integrated care at Hispanic-Serving Organizations may help to eliminate mental health service disparities among Hispanic clients.MethodUsing organizational responses from the 2014 and 2016 waves of the National Mental Health Service survey, this study conducted multivariate logistic analyses to assess whether the ACA policies related to integrated care increased the provision of integrated addictions treatment and primary care at mental health Hispanic-Serving Organizations, relative to Mainstream Organizations.ResultsFindings showed that Hispanic-Serving Organizations (54.4%) were less likely to provide integrated health services than Mainstream Organizations (59.1%) after the ACA. However, federal funding to help organizations transition into integrated care services (AOR = 1.74, p = 0.01) and accepting Medicaid payments (AOR = 1.59, p = 0.01) increased the provision of integrated care services at Hispanic-Serving Organizations over time.ConclusionsHealth care policies that increase funding to adopt integrated health services at community Hispanic-Serving Organizations may help decrease inequities in mental health access for Hispanics in the United States.

Highlights

  • The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act increased funding for integrated care to improve access to quality health care among underserved populations

  • The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) promoted the adoption of integrated care to increase the quality of health care that Americans receive

  • Participants reported high levels of satisfaction with the quality of care experienced in integrated care settings. These findings suggest that integrated care may reduce inequities in access to quality mental health care for Hispanic clients

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Summary

Introduction

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act increased funding for integrated care to improve access to quality health care among underserved populations. There is evidence that integrated care decreases inequities in access and quality of mental health care among Hispanic clients. Increasing integrated care at Hispanic-Serving Organizations may help to eliminate mental health service disparities among Hispanic clients. Integrated care, a collaborative model of health care delivery, has been shown to increase healthcare quality among Hispanic clients [5]. Increasing the provision of integrated care at HSOs may ameliorate disparities in access to quality health care among Hispanics [5]. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) promoted the adoption of integrated care to increase the quality of health care that Americans receive. Little is known about the effect of these measures on Hispanic-Serving Organizations (HSOs)

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