Provider Contributions to Disparities in Mental Health Care
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Objective: Disparities in diagnosis of mental health problems and in access to treatment among racial-ethnic groups are apparent across different behavioral conditions, particularly in the quality of treatment for depression. This study aimed to determine how much disparities differ across providers.
Methods: Bayesian mixed-effects models were used to estimate whether disparities in patient adherence to antidepressant medication (N=331,776) or psychotherapy (N=275,095) were associated with specific providers. Models also tested whether providers who achieved greater adherence to treatment, on average, among non-Hispanic white patients than among patients from racial-ethnic minority groups attained lower disparities and whether the percentage of patients from racial-ethnic minority groups in a provider caseload was associated with disparities.
Results: Disparities in adherence to both antidepressant medication and psychotherapy were associated with the provider. Provider performance with non-Hispanic white patients was negatively correlated with provider-specific disparities in adherence to psychotherapy but not to antidepressants. A higher proportion of patients from racial-ethnic minority groups in a provider's caseload was associated with lower adherence among non-Hispanic white patients, lower disparities in adherence to psychotherapy, and greater disparities in adherence to antidepressant medication.
Conclusions: Adherence to depression treatment among a provider's patients from racial-ethnic minority groups was related to adherence among that provider's non-Hispanic white patients, but evidence also suggested provider-specific disparities. Efforts among providers to decrease disparities might focus on improving the general skill of providers who treat more patients from racial-ethnic minority groups as well as offering culturally based training to providers with notable disparities.
Barber J, Childs A, Resnick S, Connors E Adm Policy Ment Health. 2024; 52(1):172-178.
PMID: 38489017 DOI: 10.1007/s10488-024-01364-4.
Antiracist Practice in Psychiatry: Principles and Recommendations.
Fani N, White D, Marshall-Lee E, Hampton-Anderson J Focus (Am Psychiatr Publ). 2023; 20(3):270-276.
PMID: 37205017 PMC: 10172519. DOI: 10.1176/appi.focus.20220045.
Spruill T, Friedman D, Diaz L, Butler M, Goldfeld K, OKula S Transl Behav Med. 2021; 11(7):1451-1460.
PMID: 33963873 PMC: 8320882. DOI: 10.1093/tbm/ibab045.