Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

Ethnic disparities in unmet need for alcoholism, drug abuse, and mental health care.

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dc.creator Wells, K
dc.creator Klap, R
dc.creator Koike, A
dc.creator Sherbourne, C
dc.date 2019-08-14T15:03:52Z
dc.date 2019-08-14T15:03:52Z
dc.date 2001
dc.date.accessioned 2022-05-20T08:39:24Z
dc.date.available 2022-05-20T08:39:24Z
dc.identifier https://doi.org/10.13016/g4pl-clt7
dc.identifier Wells, K and Klap, R and Koike, A and Sherbourne, C (2001) Ethnic disparities in unmet need for alcoholism, drug abuse, and mental health care. The American journal of psychiatry, 158 (12). pp. 2027-2032.
dc.identifier 0002-953X
dc.identifier Eprint ID 2932
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1903/23564
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/117710
dc.description OBJECTIVE: Recent policy has focused on documenting and reducing ethnic disparities in availability and quality of health care. The authors examined differences by ethnic status in unmet need for alcoholism, drug abuse, and mental health treatment. METHOD: Data were from a follow-up survey of adult respondents to a 1996-1997 national survey. Non-Hispanic whites, African Americans, and Hispanics were compared in access to alcoholism and drug abuse treatment and mental health care (primary or specialty), unmet need for care, satisfaction with care, and use of active treatment for alcoholism, drug abuse, and mental health problems in the prior 12 months. RESULTS: A total of 31.9% of whites, 28.1% of African Americans, and 30.1% of Hispanics had some alcoholism, drug abuse, and mental health care, mostly in primary care. Among those with perceived need, compared to whites, African Americans were more likely to have no access to alcoholism, drug abuse, or mental health care (25.4% versus 12.5%), and Hispanics were more likely to have less care than needed or delayed care (22.7% versus 10.7%). Among those with need, whites were more likely than Hispanics or African Americans to be receiving active alcoholism, drug abuse, or mental health treatment (37.6% versus 22.4%-25.0%). CONCLUSIONS: The authors document greater unmet need for alcoholism and drug abuse treatment and mental health care among African American and Hispanics relative to whites. New policies are needed to improve access to and quality of alcoholism, drug abuse, and mental health treatment across diverse populations.
dc.description https://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/doi/full/10.1176/appi.ajp.158.12.2027
dc.subject Disparities
dc.subject Mental Health
dc.subject Alcohol
dc.subject Illegal Drug Use
dc.subject studies
dc.subject alcoholism and drug abuse treatment
dc.subject mental health care
dc.subject African Americans
dc.subject Hispanics
dc.title Ethnic disparities in unmet need for alcoholism, drug abuse, and mental health care.
dc.type Article


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