Sarah A Lieff, Tod Mijanovich, Lawrence Yang, Diana Silver
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引用次数: 0
摘要
本研究利用带有州标识符的《全国药物使用和健康调查》,探讨了《可负担医疗法案》(ACA)的医疗补助扩展(ME)是否与可能患有精神疾病的低收入成年人在保险覆盖面、利用率和精神健康护理质量方面的种族/民族差异变化有关。本研究采用差分模型对扩保前(2010-2013 年)和扩保后(2014-2017 年)的 ME 州与未扩保州进行比较,并采用三重差分模型对这些变化在非西班牙裔白人(NHW)、非西班牙裔黑人(NHB)和西班牙裔/拉美裔种族/民族亚群中的情况进行研究。相对于非扩展州,扩展州所有种族/民族群体的保险覆盖率都有明显提高(DD:9.69;95% CI:5.17,14.21)。接受治疗但需求仍未得到满足的低收入成年人比例有所下降(DD:-3.06;95% CI:-5.92,-0.21),需求未得到满足但未接受心理健康治疗的成年人比例有所上升(DD:2.38;95% CI:0.03,4.73)。心理健康教育与差异的减少无关。
Impacts of the Affordable Care Act Medicaid Expansion on Mental Health Treatment Among Low-income Adults Across Racial/Ethnic Subgroups, 2010-2017.
This study examines whether the Affordable Care Act (ACA) Medicaid expansion (ME) was associated with changes in racial/ethnic disparities in insurance coverage, utilization, and quality of mental health care among low-income adults with probable mental illness using the National Survey on Drug Use and Health with state identifiers. This study employed difference-in-difference models to compare ME states to non-expansion states before (2010-2013) and after (2014-2017) expansion and triple difference models to examine these changes across non-Hispanic White (NHW), non-Hispanic Black (NHB), and Hispanic/Latino racial/ethnic subgroups. Insurance coverage increased significantly for all racial/ethnic groups in expansion states relative to non-expansion states (DD: 9.69; 95% CI: 5.17, 14.21). The proportion low-income adults that received treatment but still had unmet need decreased (DD: -3.06; 95% CI: -5.92, -0.21) and the proportion with unmet need and no mental health treatment increased (DD: 2.38; 95% CI: 0.03, 4.73). ME was not associated with reduced disparities.
期刊介绍:
This journal examines the organization, financing, delivery and outcomes of behavioral health services (i.e., alcohol, drug abuse, and mental disorders), providing practical and empirical contributions to and explaining the implications for the broader behavioral health field. Each issue includes an overview of contemporary concerns and recent developments in behavioral health policy and management through research articles, policy perspectives, commentaries, brief reports, and book reviews.
This journal is the official publication of the National Council for Behavioral Health.