An equity indicator for assessing mental healthcare access: a national population case study.

IF 5.9 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences Pub Date : 2024-11-29 DOI:10.1017/S2045796024000738
S Dawadi, F Shawyer, E Callander, S Patten, B Johnson, S Rosenberg, V Lakra, E Lin, H Teede, G Meadows, J Enticott
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Abstract

Aims: Achieving equitable healthcare access is a global challenge. Improving whole-population mental health and reducing the global burden of mental disorders is a key recommendation of the 2018 Lancet Global Mental Health Commission, which proposed monitoring national indicators, including the proportion of people with severe mental disorders who are service-users. This study aims to derive an equity indicator from national datasets integrating need, service utilisation and socioeconomic status, and demonstrate its utility in identifying gaps in mental health service use amongst those with the greatest need, thereby guiding equitable healthcare delivery.

Methods: We present a case study of a universal health insurance scheme (Medicare) in Australia. We developed the equity indicator using three national datasets. Geographic areas were linked to an area-based socioeconomic deprivation quintile (Census 2016). Per geographic area, we estimated the number with a mental healthcare need using scores ≥30 on the Kessler-10 (Australian National Health Surveys 2015 and 2018), and obtained the number of services used, defined as mental health-related contacts with general practitioners and mental health professionals (Medicare administrative data 2015-2019). We divided the number of services by the population with an estimated mental healthcare need and averaged these use-rates across each socioeconomic deprivation quintile. The equity indicator is the ratio of the use-rates in the least versus most deprived quintiles.

Results: Those estimated to have the greatest need for mental healthcare in 2019 ranged between 8.2% in the most disadvantaged area quintile (Q1) and 2.4% in the least (Q5), corresponding to a proportional increase of 27.7% in Q1 and 19.5% in Q5 since 2015. Equity-indicator-adjusted service rates of 4.2 (3.8-4.6) and 23.9 (22.4-25.4) showed that individuals with the highest need for care residing in Q1 areas received a stark 6 times fewer services compared to their Q5 counterparts, producing an equity indicator of 6.

Conclusions: As the global prevalence of common mental disorders may be increasing, it is crucial to calculate robust indicators evaluating the equity of mental health service use. In this Australian case study, we developed an equity indicator enabling the direct comparison of geographic areas with different need profiles. The results revealed striking inequities that persisted despite publicly-funded universal healthcare, recent service reforms and being a high-income country. This study demonstrates the importance and feasibility of generating such an indicator to inform and empower communities, healthcare providers and policymakers to pursue equitable service provision.

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评估获得精神保健的公平指标:一项全国人口案例研究。
目标:实现公平获得医疗保健是一项全球性挑战。2018年《柳叶刀》全球精神卫生委员会提出了一项重要建议,即改善全体人口的精神健康和减轻精神障碍的全球负担。该委员会提议监测国家指标,包括严重精神障碍患者使用服务的比例。本研究旨在从综合需求、服务利用和社会经济地位的国家数据集中得出一个公平指标,并证明其在确定最需要的人在精神卫生服务使用方面的差距方面的效用,从而指导公平的医疗保健提供。方法:我们提出了一个澳大利亚全民健康保险计划(Medicare)的案例研究。我们利用三个国家的数据集开发了公平指标。地理区域与基于区域的社会经济剥夺五分之一有关(2016年人口普查)。每个地理区域,我们使用Kessler-10(2015年和2018年澳大利亚国家健康调查)得分≥30来估计有精神卫生保健需求的人数,并获得使用的服务数量,定义为与全科医生和精神卫生专业人员进行精神卫生相关接触(2015-2019年医疗保险行政数据)。我们将服务的数量除以估计有精神保健需求的人口,并在每个社会经济剥夺五分之一中平均这些使用率。公平指标是最贫困五分之一与最贫困五分之一的使用率之比。结果:2019年最贫困地区五分位数(第一季度)和最贫困地区五分位数(第五季度)估计最需要精神卫生保健的人数分别为8.2%和2.4%,与2015年相比,第一季度和第五季度分别增长27.7%和19.5%。权益指标调整后的服务率分别为4.2(3.8-4.6)和23.9(22.4-25.4),表明居住在Q1地区的最高护理需求的个人获得的服务比Q5地区少了6倍,产生的权益指标为6。结论:由于常见精神障碍的全球患病率可能正在增加,因此计算评估精神卫生服务使用公平性的可靠指标至关重要。在这个澳大利亚案例研究中,我们开发了一个公平指标,可以直接比较具有不同需求概况的地理区域。调查结果显示,尽管有公共资金支持的全民医疗保健、最近的服务改革以及作为一个高收入国家,严重的不平等现象依然存在。这项研究表明,制定这样一个指标的重要性和可行性,为社区、医疗保健提供者和政策制定者提供信息和授权,以追求公平的服务提供。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
1.20%
发文量
121
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences is a prestigious international, peer-reviewed journal that has been publishing in Open Access format since 2020. Formerly known as Epidemiologia e Psichiatria Sociale and established in 1992 by Michele Tansella, the journal prioritizes highly relevant and innovative research articles and systematic reviews in the areas of public mental health and policy, mental health services and system research, as well as epidemiological and social psychiatry. Join us in advancing knowledge and understanding in these critical fields.
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