儿科精神病突发事件中的种族差异:一种卫生系统方法。

Journal of psychiatry and brain science Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-04-13 DOI:10.20900/jpbs.20200006
Abhery Das, Parvati Singh, Tim Bruckner
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引用次数: 4

摘要

在患有严重精神障碍的非裔美国青年中,只有不到一半的人接受精神病治疗。当他们得到护理时,非裔美国青年使用急诊科的比率高于白人。我们研究了社区卫生中心初级精神卫生保健的快速扩张是否减少了急诊科对精神病护理的访问,尤其是在非裔美国青年中。通过四项研究,我们检验了(1)心理健康服务能力对非裔美国青年精神病护理差异的影响;(2) 社区卫生中心的心理健康就诊与重复的精神病急诊就诊有何不同;(3) 扩大社区卫生中心的县级驱动因素;以及(4)社区卫生中心的扩建如何影响整体精神病紧急护理。结果表明,社区卫生中心心理健康护理的连续性增加,与青年精神病ED就诊中种族差异的减少相对应。此外,社区卫生中心容量的增加与精神病急诊科的多次就诊呈反比,与精神病急救科的整体就诊呈反比。最后,研究结果显示,在贫困程度更高、医生可用性更低、未参保比例更高的县,社区卫生中心的心理健康服务有所增加。我们的研究表明,扩大联邦资助的初级精神卫生服务会影响整个紧急精神病护理系统。然而,这种扩大似乎并没有显著减少精神科急诊就诊中的种族/民族差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Racial Disparities in Pediatric Psychiatric Emergencies: A Health Systems Approach.

Less than half of African American youth with severe mental disorders receive psychiatric care. When they do receive care, African American youth use the Emergency Department at higher rates than whites. We examine whether rapid expansion of primary mental health care at Community Health Centers reduces Emergency Department visits for psychiatric care especially among African American youth. Through four studies, we examine (1) the impact of mental health service capacity on the disparity of psychiatric care among African American youth; (2) how Community Health Center mental health visits vary with repeat psychiatric emergency visits; (3) the county-level drivers of the expansion of Community Health Centers; and (4) how Community Health Center expansion affects overall psychiatric emergency care. Results indicate that increased continuity of mental health care at Community Health Centers corresponds with a reduction in racial disparities in youth psychiatric ED visits. In addition, an increase in Community Health Center capacity varies inversely with repeated psychiatric Emergency Department visits and inversely with psychiatric Emergency Department visits overall. And finally, results show an increase in Community Health Center mental health services among counties with greater poverty, lower physician availability, and higher percentage of uninsured. Our studies indicate that expansion of federally-funded primary mental health services affects the overall system of emergency psychiatric care. However, this expansion does not appear to dramatically reduce racial/ethnic disparities in psychiatric emergency department visits.

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