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Definition
Services aimed at prevention, detection/diagnosis, and treatment of mental health problems |
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Why study mental health separate from general health? |
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Definition
- Differences in how the disorders are defined and ascertaining need for treatment (policy implications)
- Differences in perception of need for care and stigma
- Differences in historical development of services
- differences in financing mental health care (private/public mix) and responsiveness to cost sharing
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Term
What are mental health problems?
(DSM) |
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Definition
“Clinically significant behavioral or psychological syndrome or pattern that occurs in an individual and is associated with present distress or disability or with significantly increased risk of suffering death, pain, disability, or an important loss of freedom.” |
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What are mental health problems?
(ICD)
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…a clinically recognizable set of symptoms or behaviour associated with in most cases with distress and with interference with personal function.” |
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What are mental health problems?
(Government) |
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Definition
More symptom focused
SPMI: NIMH
SMI: state mental health block grant funding can be used for this population
SED: emotional problems and serious impairment in social/educational functioning (no specific diagnosis)
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Definition
(Highly sensitive/low specificity) Tested against the gold standard of clinical interviews using semi-structured instruments. these type of screening measures lead to a lot of false positives |
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Definition
“…mental disorders that interfere with some area of social functioning.” (Surgeon General Report, 1999) |
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Definition
“…a history of serious acute episodes, continuing residual disability, and high level of medical and psychological need.” (Mechanic, 1999)
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Term
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Definition
Primary: preventing mental illness before they occur
Secondary: Intervening early in the course of the disease and reducing the chance of full-blown illness
Tertiary: Preventing disability associated with illness and chronicity |
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Term
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Definition
a specifically written document of the Government or Ministry of Health containing the goals for improving the mental health situation of the country, the priorities among those goals and the main directions for attaining them. |
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Components of Mental Health Policy |
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Definition
Advocacy, promotion, prevention, treatment, rehabilitation, legal protections |
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Mental Health Legislation |
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Definition
legal provisions for the protection of the basic human and civil rights of people with mental disordersand deals with treatment facilities, personnel, professional training and service structure. Mental health legislation includes provisions concerned with the restraint and protection of individual patients, regulation of compulsory admission, discharge procedures, appeals, protection of property, etc. |
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Definition
Any type of care, supervision and rehabilitation of mental patients outside the hospital by health and social workers based in the community |
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Definition
Neuropsychiatric illnesses are responsible for 13% of the total burden of disease globally. |
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Barriers to seeking treatment |
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Definition
- Lack of perceived need
- Attitudes towards treatment seeking and mental health "literacy"
- Stigma
- Structural barriers (distance, insurance, lack of providers)
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Term
Andersen's Socio-behavioral model |
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Definition
- Predisposing factorsmake certain people more likely to use health services even though these factors are not directly responsible for health service use (e.g., age, gender).
- Enabling factors make health service resources available to the individual (e.g., insurance).
- Need (illness) factorsare the individual or the family’s perception of illness or the probability of its occurrence (perceived) and the clinical evaluation by the formal health care system (evaluated).
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Term
Evaluation of Andersen Model |
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Definition
•The model is intuitive and parsimonious.
•However, the model does not make strong predictions.
•The model does not clearly identify how perception of need may vary according to predisposing factors or even enabling factors.
•The proximal process of deciding to seek treatment is not included in the model. |
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Term
Theory of reasoned action |
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Definition
- The most proximal cause of behavior is behavioral intention (what one intends to do or not to do).
- Behavioral intention is predicted by the person’s attitudes toward that behavior and how he/she thinks other people would view them if they performed the behavior (norms).
- The effect of attitudes and norms differ for different behaviors, situations and persons.
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Term
Evaluation of reasoned action |
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Definition
•the theory models proximal process of deciding to seek treatment.
•The model makes stronger predictions than Andersen’s model.
•However, the place of need factors in the model is not clear. |
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Term
Differences in treatment seeking (factors) |
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Definition
Age: Younger and Older adults are less likely to seek treatment than middle-age individuals
Sex: Women are more likely to seek treatment than men
Race: ethnic minorities seek are less likely to seek treatment |
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Term
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Definition
Legislation: Over 30 state currently have parity laws; the 2008 federal parity law (going into effect in 2010)
Aim:reduced financial barriers |
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Term
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Definition
Aim: greater recognition of mental illness and more positive attitudes toward treatment seeking |
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Causes of Deinstitutionalization |
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Definition
- Chlorpromaxin- Introduced in 1954
- Negative Publicity and the Civil Rights Movement
- Introduction of Medicaid/Medicare and SSI & SSDI
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Term
Consequences of Deinstitutionalization |
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Definition
- Shift of the site of care from inpatient to outpatient.
- Transfer of financial burden from the states to the Federal government (Medicaid/Medicare/SSI), Community Mental Health Centers (CMHC).
- Expansion in the population with psychiatric problems who seek and receive treatment.
- Shift in the role of patients into “consumers”
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Term
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Definition
One common measure is the disability-adjusted life year (DALY): number of years lost due to ill-health, disability or early death.
DALY provides information on non-fatal health outcomes of diseases that have been largely neglected in health planning.
DALY= potential years of life lost (YLL) due to premature death + years of life with disability (YLD) due to illness or injury. |
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Term
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Definition
Societal Perspective: cost to society
Third Party Payer Perspective: Insurer or government
Patient Perspectives: co-pays |
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Term
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Definition
•A) Tax-financed, B) public, C) single payer, D) universal E) separate from employment F) no distinction between social insurance and public assistance
•Federal government pays ~ 1/3 and provincial governments pay the rest from various taxes and premiums in BC and Alberta
•Prohibits private health insurance (hospitals and physicians who bill provincial health plans are not allowed to receive payment from private insurances) |
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Why health care is cheaper in Canada? |
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Definition
1) Lower administrative costs in Canada (1/3 times the US)
2) Lower cost/day in hospital (less use of advanced procedures)
3) Lower physician fees and pharmaceutical costs
4) Paying hospitals by set budgets |
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Term
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Definition
•A) Tax-financed, B) public, C) single payer, D) universal E) separate from employment F) no distinction between social insurance and public assistance
•The bulk of payment comes from the Taxes
•Does not prohibit private health insurance (compared with Canada)
•In 2004 initiated Pay for Performance (P4P) ->(dramatic increase in cost) |
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Term
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Definition
1)Salary/capitation payment of providers
2)Payment to hospitals by set budgets |
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Term
Price Elasticity of demand |
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Definition
Moral Hazards: occurs when a party insulated from risk behaves differently than it would behave if it were fully exposed to the risk.
The demand for mental health care is more responsive to cost sharing than the demand for physical health care (“price elasticity of demand”).
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Term
Cutting Costs: Financing Controls |
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Definition
Controlling price (P x Q=C). (price x quantity= Cost)
•Price controls can be regulatory (set prices of services by Medicaid, Medicare, Private insurers) or competitive.
•Problems: cost-shifting to more generous and increase Q of services to maintain.
Controlling quanity
•Regulatory: Limits on taxes (e.g., govt setting limits on Medicare Part A taxes)
•Competitive controls (insurers competing by lower costs).
•Problems:Doesn’t really work if cost not contained which leads to a deficit. |
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Cutting Cost: reimbursement |
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Definition
Controlling quantity (P x Q=C).
•Changing unit of payment (capitation).
–Placing more risk on the provider
•Increasing cost sharing (deductibles, copays).
•Utilization management (preauthorization).
•Limiting supply (waitlists).
•Changing the mix of providers (substitution).
–Social workers instead of psychiatrists
•Problems: reduced access, poorer health outcomes. |
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How are premiums decided? |
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Definition
Experience rating: Insurance company setting premiums based on individual or group health risks: sick pay more than healthy, high risk jobs pay more than low risk. Can lead to adverse selection.
Community rating: Everyone in the community pays the same (e.g., employer based insurance). |
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Term
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Definition
- “Health insurance provides a mechanism to distribute health care more in accordance with human need rather than exclusively on the basis of ability to pay. To achieve this goal, funds are redistributed from the healthy to the sick, a subsidy that helps pay the costs of those unable to purchase services on their own.”
- In economic terms Health insurance distributes (equalizes) the risk to a group of individuals.
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Term
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Definition
Neuropsychiatric illnesses are responsible for 13% of the total burden of disease globally |
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Term
Barriers to improving Global Mental Health |
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Definition
1. Scarcity of Resource
2. Inequality-distribution of resources within and between countries
3. Inefficiencies |
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Term
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Definition
Definitions: a specifically written document of the Government or Ministry of Health containing the goals for improving the mental health situation of the country, the priorities among those goals and the main directions for attaining them.
May include:
•Advocacy, Promotion, Prevention, Treatment, Rehabilitation, & Legal protections |
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Term
Mental Health Legislation |
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Definition
Definitions: legal provisions for the protection of the basic human and civil rights of people with mental disordersand deals with treatment facilities, personnel, professional training and service structure. Mental health legislation includes provisions concerned with the restraint and protection of individual patients, regulation of compulsory admission, discharge procedures, appeals, protection of property, etc. |
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Term
Consequences of Deinstitutionalization |
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Definition
- Expansion and diversification of the mental health workforce.
- Practice innovation: New medications with fewer side effects and new therapies (CBT).
- Expanded use of pharmaceuticals.
- Expansion of the role of general medical sector in treatment of mental disorders.
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