Racial and ethnic disparities in treatment and treatment type for depression in a national sample of Medicaid recipients

B McGregor, C Li, P Baltrus, M Douglas… - Psychiatric …, 2020 - Am Psychiatric Assoc
B McGregor, C Li, P Baltrus, M Douglas, J Hopkins, G Wrenn, K Holden, E Respress…
Psychiatric services, 2020Am Psychiatric Assoc
Objective: The purpose of this secondary data analysis was to describe racial-ethnic
disparities in receipt of depression treatment and treatment modality among adult Medicaid
beneficiaries with depression from a nationally representative sample—28 states and the
District of Columbia—of Medicaid beneficiaries (N= 599,421). Methods: Medicaid claims
data were extracted from the full 2008–2009 Medicaid Analytic Extract file. The primary
outcome was type of depression treatment: medication only, therapy only, medication and …
Objective
The purpose of this secondary data analysis was to describe racial-ethnic disparities in receipt of depression treatment and treatment modality among adult Medicaid beneficiaries with depression from a nationally representative sample—28 states and the District of Columbia—of Medicaid beneficiaries (N=599,421).
Methods
Medicaid claims data were extracted from the full 2008–2009 Medicaid Analytic Extract file. The primary outcome was type of depression treatment: medication only, therapy only, medication and therapy, and no treatment. The secondary outcome was treatment for depression (yes-no). Crude and adjusted odds ratios (AORs) were generated for univariate and multivariate models, respectively, and 95% confidence intervals of odds ratios and p values were calculated.
Results
There were 599,421 individuals in the sample. Rates of depression treatment were lower for African Americans and Hispanics, compared with Caucasians. Percentages receiving no treatment were 19.9% of African Americans, 15.2% of Hispanics, and 11.9% of Caucasians. After full adjustment, African Americans were about half as likely as Caucasians to receive treatment (AOR=0.52), Hispanics were about a third as likely (AOR=0.71), and those from other racial-ethnic groups were about a fifth as likely (AOR=0.84). Caucasians were more likely than any other group to receive medication only.
Conclusions
This study contributes to evidence about the intersection of social factors and health outcomes and discusses health care engagement, stigma, and policy drivers of racial-ethnic disparities. The study is the first to identify disparities in rates and types of depression treatment among racial-ethnic subgroups of Medicaid beneficiaries in a nationally representative sample.
Psychiatric Services
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