Behavioural Health Screening and Service Use in a Statewide Sample of MedicaidEligible Pediatric Outpatients
Behavioural Health Screening and Service Use in a Statewide Sample of MedicaidEligible Pediatric Outpatients
Author Info
J. Michael Murphy Alexa Riobueno-Naylor Haregnesh Haile Holcomb Juliana M Anamika Dutta Rao Kandru Amy M. Shui Hang Lee Michael Jellinek
Corresponding Author
J. Michael MurphyDepartment of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
A B S T R A C T
Objective: This study explored site-level rates of behavioural health (BH) screening, positive screening, and BH service use in statewide data from the largest Medicaid Health Maintenance Organization in Massachusetts. Methods: Screening rates at annual well-child visits (WCVs) were assessed across 908 sites (practices) for patients ages 4-17 between 2014-2018. The primary analytic sample included WCVs in 2016 (N=76,752) and was restricted to sites with at least 30 WCVs (N=304 sites; N=72,842 patients). Use of BH services was assessed six months before and after the index WCV. Results: The mean WCV screening rate across the analytical sample was 71.2% (SD=31.3; range=0.0- 100.0%) and the mean positive screening rate was 7.2% (SD=12.7, range=0-100%). Using intra-class correlations, small, but meaningful differences, were found between sites in rates of overall (r=0.38; 95% CI=0.25-0.50) and positive (r=0.10; 95% CI=0.00-0.29) screening. Although the relationship between a site’s rate of screening and the rate of BH treatment failed to reach statistical significance, there was a nonsignificant correlation (r=0.08, p=0.17) in the predicted direction and sites that screened at or above the mean screening rate (71.9% of their WCVs) were significantly more likely to have 6.0% or more of their patients receive subsequent BH services than were sites with screening rates below 71.9% (67.2% vs. 51.2%, p<.05). Conclusion: The current study documented a high level of continued compliance with the statewide mandate for routine psychosocial screening after more than a decade, although there were some relatively small decreases in compliance in recent years. The study also found that there were significant differences between sites in rates of BH screening and positive screening and a relationship between site-level rates of screening and service use.
Article Info
Article Type
Research ArticlePublication history
Received: Mon 07, Dec 2020Accepted: Mon 21, Dec 2020
Published: Thu 31, Dec 2020
Copyright
© 2023 J. Michael Murphy. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Hosting by Science Repository.DOI: 10.31487/j.PDR.2020.03.04