Disparity in Depression Treatment Among Racial and Ethnic Minority Populations in the United States
Cambridge Health Alliance · Harvard University · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Prior research on racial and ethnic disparities in depression treatment has been limited by the scarcity of national samples that include an array of diagnostic and quality indicators and substantial numbers of non-English-speaking individuals from minority groups. Using nationally representative data for 8,762 persons, the authors evaluated differences in access to and quality of depression treatments between patients in racial-ethnic minority groups and non-Latino white patients.
Access to mental health care was assessed by past-year receipt of any mental health treatment. Adequate treatment for acute depression was defined as four or more specialty or general health provider visits in the past year plus antidepressant use for 30 days or more or eight or more specialty mental health provider visits lasting at least 30 minutes, with no antidepressant use.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 35.96
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 59
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- Ethnic group
- Depression (economics)
- Demography
- Medicine
- Psychiatry
- Psychology
- Gerontology
- Political science