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
Review Data
Q: Is the topic relevant to the journal area of interest? Is it contemporary and interesting for
researchers?
A: Very good
Abstract & Keywords
Q: Are all required components included in the abstract? Are the keywords appropriately chosen?
A: Very good
Goal
Q: Is the goal explicitly stated in the Introduction? Is its formulation clear and unambiguous?
A: Very good
Structure
Q: Is the paper's structure coherent? Is it in coherence with the goal of the paper?
A: Good
Tools and Methods
Q: Are methods the author uses adequate and well used?
A: Good
Discussion & Conclusion
Q: Is it related to the results presented before? Do you consider them as coherent?
A: Very good
Comments: The Discussion section aptly analyses the relationship between site-level overall screening, positive screening and behavioural health (BH) service utilization rates by evaluating the screening rates and BH service billing using site and patient-level data. Results suggest that there are significant differences between sites in rates of BH screening and positive screening which are considered meaningful. It provides some cause for concern which needs to be resolved so that the quality of Children’s Behavioural Health Initiative (CBHI) screening programme can be improved.
Literature
Q: Does the author utilize relevant literature?
A: Very good
Author's knowledge
Q: What is the level of the author’s knowledge? Does the author utilize all recent contributions relevant to the topic?
A: Very good
Length
Q: Is the length of the paper adequate to the significance of the topic? Do you suggest shortening the paper without losing its value?
A: Good
Figures & Tables
Q: Does the author use them suitably? Are legend and notations clear?
A: Good
Writing style
Q: Is it clear and understandable?
A: Good
Further comments on the paper
Comments: This study, involving 287,042 pediatric patients presented for well-child visits (WCV) between 2014-2018 across 908 sites statewide, analyses the relationship between site-level rates of behavioral health (BH) screening, positive screening and BH service use in statewide data from the largest Medicaid Health Maintenance Organization in Massachusetts. The findings of this study not only suggest the importance of BH screening rates as a key factor to predict the likelihood of BH service use for pediatric patients but also discovers a disparity in access to BH services since the rates of BH screening and of prior and subsequent BH services vary widely across sites. This study also addresses few questions including the decrease in screening rates which call for further research.
Q: Would you recommend this manuscript for further publication?
A: Yes - Suitable to be published
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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
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