Health
Serv Res 1994 Jun;29(2):135-53
Ethnic differences in use of inpatient mental health services by blacks,
whites, and Hispanics in a national insured population.
Padgett DK, Patrick C, Burns BJ, Schlesinger HJ.
School of Social Work, New York University, NY 10003.
OBJECTIVE: We examine whether ethnic differences in
use of inpatient mental health services exist when the usually confounding
effects of minority status and culture are minimized or controlled.
DATA SOURCES AND STUDY SETTING: Secondary analyses were
conducted using a national insurance claims database for 1.2 million federal
employees and their dependents insured by the Blue Cross/Blue Shield (BC/BS)
Federal Employees Plan (FEP).
STUDY DESIGN: The Andersen-Newman model of health utilization
was used to analyze predisposing, enabling, and need variables as predictors
of inpatient mental health utilization during 1983. The study design was
cross-sectional.
DATA COLLECTION: The study database was made up of BC/BS
insurance claims, Office of Personnel Management employee data, and Area
Resource File data.
PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: No significant differences were found
among blacks, whites, and Hispanics in the probability of a psychiatric
hospitalization or in the number of inpatient psychiatric days. Regression
analyses revealed younger age and psychiatric treatment of other family
members as significant predictors of a hospitalization; region of residence,
younger age, hospital bed availability, and high option plan enrollment
were significant predictors of the number of treatment days.
CONCLUSIONS: Ethnic differences in use of inpatient
mental health services were not significant in this generously insured
population. Further research involving primary data collection among large
and diverse samples of ethnic individuals is needed to fully examine the
effects of cultural and socioeconomic differences on use of mental health
services.
PMID: 8005786 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]