Mental Health Care Disparities Persist for Black and Latino Children
Health Behavior News Service, part of the Center for Advancing Health 听June 21, 2012听
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By Katherine Kahn, Contributing Writer
Research Source:听Health Services Research
Health Behavior News Service
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Disparities in the use of mental health services, including outpatient care and psychotropic drug prescriptions, persist for black and Latino children, reports a new study in听Health Services Research.
鈥淐hildren鈥檚 mental illness is very predictive of poor outcomes later in life – socially, educationally, income-wise and employment-wise,鈥 said lead author Benjamin Le Cook, Ph.D., senior scientist at the Center for Multicultural Mental Health Research at the Cambridge Health Alliance and assistant professor at Harvard Medical School. 鈥淭here is a real need to understand why there are these big differences in mental health care for kids.鈥澨
Cook and his colleagues looked at data from a nationally representative sample of over 30,000 youth ages 5 to 21 from the 2002-2003 and the 2006-2007 Medical Expenditure Panel Surveys (MEPS). They analyzed the data for the use of outpatient mental health care, use of psychiatric drugs and overall mental health care.听
鈥淎bout 10 percent of white youth are using mental health care compared to about half that percentage – between 4 and 5 percent – of black and Latino youth using mental health care.鈥 That 2-to-1, white-to-minority ratio is a giant disparity compared to other areas of health care,鈥 Cook said.
Researchers also found that this disparity didn鈥檛 change between the two time periods studied.听 In addition, while money spent for mental health care increased for white children between 2002-2003 and 2006-2007, it decreased significantly for Latino children. 鈥淓ven among those who are in care, it looks like the amount of dollars that the system is spending on Latino users relative to white users is shrinking,鈥 Cook said.
Marc Atkins, Ph.D., from the Institute of Juvenile Research at the University of Illinois at Chicago commented, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 difficult to tease out is how much of the lack of [minority children鈥檚] access to care reflects the lack of availability of quality mental health care or lack of their family鈥檚 confidence that these services are going to be helpful. Some of that鈥檚 related to stigma about mental health care and some of that鈥檚 related to contentious relationships these families may have with social service systems.鈥
Atkins said research shows that when social service systems use strategies to engage these families and work to overcome barriers of stigma and trust, access to mental health care increases.
Cook commented that having health insurance coverage is one of the important predictors of mental health care use. 鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty clear that if we got people better insurance and insured the uninsured, that would help a lot in reducing disparities,鈥 he said.
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