muskie school of public service use of mental health services by rural children maine rural health...

8
Muskie School of Public Service Use of Mental Health Services by Rural Children Maine Rural Health Research Center David Lambert, PhD Georgetown University National Technical Assistance Center for Children's Mental Health Webinar: Healthy Children and Families: Reducing Behavioral Health Disparities in Rural and Frontier Areas March 18, 2010

Upload: marcus-stanley

Post on 24-Dec-2015

213 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Muskie School of Public Service Use of Mental Health Services by Rural Children Maine Rural Health Research Center David Lambert, PhD Georgetown University

Muskie School of Public Service

Use of Mental Health Services by Rural Children

Maine Rural Health Research Center

David Lambert, PhD

Georgetown University National Technical Assistance Center for Children's Mental HealthWebinar: Healthy Children and Families: Reducing Behavioral Health Disparities

in Rural and Frontier Areas

March 18, 2010

Page 2: Muskie School of Public Service Use of Mental Health Services by Rural Children Maine Rural Health Research Center David Lambert, PhD Georgetown University

Muskie School of Public Service Maine Rural Health Research Center

BACKGROUND

Most children with emotional or mental health problems go untreated

Gap between need and service use is assumed to be wider in rural than in urban areas

Assumed that rural children have lower access to mental health services & are less likely to have needs met

National level research is limited, particularly regarding access across levels of rurality

Page 3: Muskie School of Public Service Use of Mental Health Services by Rural Children Maine Rural Health Research Center David Lambert, PhD Georgetown University

Muskie School of Public Service Maine Rural Health Research Center

Maine Rural Health Research Center Studies to Address This Gap

Use of Mental Health Services by Rural Children, 2008. Data: National Survey of America’s Families (NSAF); pooled data 1997, 1999, 2002

Access to Mental Health Services and Family Impact of Rural Children with Mental Health Needs, Forthcoming.Data: National Survey of Children with Special Health Care Needs (NS-CSHCN) 2005-2006 and Area Resource File,2006

Both studies are large enough to look at different size rural areas

Both studies rely on family self report of mental health issues and care received

Page 4: Muskie School of Public Service Use of Mental Health Services by Rural Children Maine Rural Health Research Center David Lambert, PhD Georgetown University

Muskie School of Public Service Maine Rural Health Research Center

Research Questions Addressed in the Studies

What is the prevalence of mental health needs across rural and urban residence?

Do children in rural and urban areas vary in their level of mental health needs?

Do children in need of mental health services receive it? Does this vary by rural and urban residence?

What impact does family income and type of insurance have on the use of mental health services by children across rural and urban residence?

What impact (financial and emotional) do children’s mental health needs have on their family (rural vs. urban)?

Page 5: Muskie School of Public Service Use of Mental Health Services by Rural Children Maine Rural Health Research Center David Lambert, PhD Georgetown University

Muskie School of Public Service Maine Rural Health Research Center

Findings

Rural and urban children have similar rates of mental health problems (rural very slightly higher).

A greater percentage of rural children with mental health needs have a behavioral difficulty than urban children (59.1 vs. 53.7 %).

Rural and urban children have similar rates of any mental health care (initial access).

Rural children receive less follow-up care / are less likely to have their mental health needs met than urban children.

Page 6: Muskie School of Public Service Use of Mental Health Services by Rural Children Maine Rural Health Research Center David Lambert, PhD Georgetown University

Muskie School of Public Service Maine Rural Health Research Center

Findings, continued

Public insurance (Medicaid and S-CHIP) helps all children, but particularly rural children who receive mental health care.

Rural families with children with mental health needs are more likely to spend 6 hours or more a week coordinating their child’s care than urban families (12.1 vs. 8.5 %).

Page 7: Muskie School of Public Service Use of Mental Health Services by Rural Children Maine Rural Health Research Center David Lambert, PhD Georgetown University

Muskie School of Public Service Maine Rural Health Research Center

Policy Recommendations

Support and enhance private and public (Medicaid, S-CHIP) health insurance for children.

Build and fund a range of rural service systems (e.g., schools, child welfare, primary care) that support children’s mental health.

Support modalities that can enhance ongoing access to mental health for rural children (e.g. telemental health).

Support rural families.

Page 8: Muskie School of Public Service Use of Mental Health Services by Rural Children Maine Rural Health Research Center David Lambert, PhD Georgetown University

Muskie School of Public Service Maine Rural Health Research Center

For Further Information

David Lambert, PhD

[email protected]

(207) 780-4502

Jennifer Lenardson, MHS

[email protected]

(207) 228-8399