Abstract

The aim of the structural reform of outpatient psychotherapy in Germany in 2017 was to make access to psychotherapy guideline easier and more flexible. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether more people gained access to outpatient psychotherapy after the reform and the treatment pathways they used in the process. From the nationwide AOK routine data, 2 cohorts (2016 and 2019) of insured persons with a newly made diagnosis indicating the need for psychotherapy were identified and subdivided according to age and gender. The extent to which these insurees received treatment within the framework of psychotherapy guideline and the treatment elements used in the process were examined. After the reform, a greater percentage of insurees with a mental disorder received treatment under the psychotherapy guideline. More women accessed treatment, with pronounced increase among adolescents and young adults. The newly introduced services of psychotherapeutic consultation hours and acute treatment were widely used. The results indicate that the reform has succeeded in facilitating access to outpatient psychotherapy, at least in some population groups. In addition, the new psychotherapeutic consultation hours now seem to cover a psychotherapeutic counselling need that was previously not explicitly included in the fee schedule.

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