The role of adverse physical health events on the utilization of mental health services
- PMID: 22742712
- PMCID: PMC3589961
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2012.01442.x
The role of adverse physical health events on the utilization of mental health services
Abstract
Objective: To test the degree to which adverse physical health events may subsequently increase the utilization of mental health services.
Methods: A quasi-experimental pretest-posttest design was employed on a nationally representative sample of adults from the Medical Expenditure Panel Surveys for years 2004 and 2005. We constructed a 2-year balanced-panel dataset on 6,017 U.S. adults who did not have any adverse physical health events in 2004. We calculated difference-in-differences estimators that capture the effect of adverse physical health events on provider visits and prescription drug use for the treatment of mental health conditions.
Principal findings: Our most rigorous analytic model shows that an adverse physical health event is significantly associated with more than a threefold increase in the likelihood of provider visits and prescribed medication use for the treatment of mental health problems. These increases are mainly through office-based physician visits for nonsevere mental health conditions. This relationship is greater among those who experience more severe physical health events.
Conclusion: An adverse physical health event substantially increases the utilization of mental health care. Mental health service use increases with the severity of a physical health condition.
© Health Research and Educational Trust.
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