A Systematic Review of Interventions to Improve Initiation of Mental Health Care Among Racial-Ethnic Minority Groups
Abstract
Objective:
Methods:
Results:
Conclusions:
Methods
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
Population.
Interventions.
Outcomes.
Search Strategy
Data Extraction
Quality Appraisal
Results
Study Characteristics
Characteristics of participants | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Intervention type and study | Location | Setting | N | Age | Race-ethnicity | Illness | Outcomes measured | |
Policy change as natural experiment | ||||||||
Adams et al., 2015 (33) | 35 states | Fee-for-service Medicare and Medicaid health services | 1,354 | <65 (65%); ≥65 (35%) | 70% whites; 15% African Americans; 12% Hispanics; 1% Asians; 1% Native Americans | Major depression and diabetes | Any antidepressant use per month | |
Screening and referral | ||||||||
Cohen et al., 2003 (27) | New York | Nursing homes | 123 | 82±9 | Primarily African Americans | Depression | Prescription for and receipt of antidepressants | |
Rausch et al., 2012 (38) | New York | Pediatric and adolescent primary care practices | 636 adolescents; 41 providers | 13–20 | Primarily Latinos | Depressive symptoms | Provider attitudes toward depression screening and referral; patient willingness to be screened | |
Psychoeducation | ||||||||
Alvidrez et al., 2005 (22) | San Francisco | Geriatric health clinic | 69 | 71.4±6.4 | African Americans | Mood or anxiety disorders (59%) | Access to psychotherapy or psychosocial services; effect of psychoeducation on decision to start or stay in therapy; whether the ethnicity of the psychoeducator mattered | |
Casas et al., 2014 (24) | San Diego | Community mental health agency | 93 | 38.0±11.6 | Latinos | na | Willingness to seek or recommend professional help | |
Hernandez and Organista, 2013 (19) | San Francisco | Community clinic | 142 | 18–55 | Latinas | At risk of depression | Self-efficacy to identify need for treatment; decreased stigma; depression knowledge; intention to make appropriate health decisions; treatment history | |
Lopez et al., 2009 (25) | Los Angeles | Church | 57 community residents; 38 family caregivers of persons with schizophrenia | Community residents (36.5±10.7); family caregivers (49.9±12.20 | Latinos | na | Community members' and caregivers' recommendation of professional mental health treatment | |
Teng and Friedman, 2009 (26) | Houston | Church | 27 | 74.0±9.4 | Chinese Americans | na | Intention to consult with a mental health professional; help-seeking preferences | |
Tran et al., 2014 (20) | Chatham, Durham, and Wake counties, North Carolina | Promotoras' social network (participants’ choice of location [home or quiet community space]) or by phone | 58 | Mean=38 (SD not reported) | Latinas (primarily Spanish speaking) | Depressive symptoms | Attitudes toward care | |
Unger et al., 2013 (23) | Los Angeles | Community adult schools | 185 | 35.8±12.9 | Latinos | na | Stigma concerns about mental health care; confidence to identify depression; willingness to seek help | |
Colocation of mental health services | ||||||||
Areán et al., 2008 (16), and Bartels et al., 2004 (17) | 10 study sites (community health centers, hospital-based network, and U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs hospital) | Primary care setting | 2,022 | ≥65 | 51.7% whites; 24.7% African Americans; 14.7% Latino; 5.5% Asian; 3.4% other | Depression, anxiety, or drinking problem | Attended ≥1 mental health or substance abuse provider following primary care visit | |
Ayalon et al., 2007 (15) | San Francisco | Primary care setting | 183 | ≥65 | 49% African Americans; 35% whites; 16% other | Depression, anxiety, or drinking problem | Attended ≥1 mental health or substance abuse provider following primary care visit | |
Chong and Moreno, 2012 (39) | Tucson, Arizona | Community health center | 167 | 43±12 | Hispanics (primarily Mexicans) | Major depression | Making mental health appointments; patients’ willingness to pay for mental health services | |
Kataoka et al., 2007 (34) | Los Angeles | School | 1,062 | 5–18 | 71% Latinos | na | Use of school-based mental health treatment | |
Care or case management | ||||||||
Boyd et al., 2015 (35) | Philadelphia | Community-based organization that addresses infant mortality and morbidity | 38 | 24±3.7 | 84.2% African Americans; 5.3% Latinos; 2.6% Asians; 7.8% patients with multiracial or multiethnic background | Major depression (84.2%); bipolar disorder and other mood disorders (13.2%) | Attended a behavioral health appointment | |
Chinman et al., 2000 (13) | 15 sites in 9 metropolitan regions | Sites serving homeless adults | 1,340 | 38.4±9.4 | 53.1% African Americans; 46.9% whites | Major depression (50%); schizophrenia (35%); personality disorder (23%); anxiety disorder (20%); bipolar disorder (20%) | Use of psychiatric services | |
Horvitz-Lennon et al., 2011 (14) | 18 sites in 9 metropolitan regions | Sites serving homeless adults | 6,829 | 38.5±9.4 | 49.7% African Americans; 5.6% Latinos, 44.7% whites | Depression, psychosis, mania, and disturbed behavior | Use of psychiatric services | |
Uebelacker et al., 2011 (41) | Providence, Rhode Island | Primary care setting | 38 | Intervention (40.5±8.6); control (37.6±9.5) | Latinos | Depressive symptoms | Visits to outpatient provider for behavioral health; prescription of antidepressants | |
Yeung et al., 2004 (40) | Boston | Community health center | 6,095 | 54±18 | Chinese Americans | Various psychiatric diagnoses, including major depression, anxiety disorders, adjustment disorder, and schizophrenia | Referral by primary care physician to behavioral health services | |
Collaborative care | ||||||||
Areán et al., 2005 (28) | 7 sites in North Carolina, Texas, Indiana, Washington, and California | Primary care | 1,801 | ≥60 | 77.1% whites; 12% African Americans; 8% Latinos (primarily Mexicans); 3% others | Major depression or dysthymia | Use of antidepressants and counseling | |
Chung et al., 2014 (36), and Wells et al., 2013 (37) | Los Angeles | Mental health, primary care, substance abuse, and social services providers; faith-based programs; parks; hair salons; exercise clubs | 1,018 | 44.8±12.7 | 40.2% Latinos; 47.9% African Americans; 8.4% non-Hispanic whites; 3.4% others | Depressive symptoms | Behavioral health service use for outpatient, inpatient, and emergency room visits | |
Cooper et al., 2013 (46) | Medically underserved neighborhoods in Maryland and Delaware | Urban, community-based primary care clinics | 132 patients; 27 primary care physicians | 18–75 | African Americans | Major depression | Receipt of depression treatment (antidepressants or counseling); patient attitudes on readiness for treatment; perceived effectiveness of antidepressants | |
Ell et al., 2011 (44), and Ell et al., 2008 (45) | Los Angeles | Oncology clinics | 472 | ≥18 | 88% Hispanics | Depressive symptoms | Receipt of depression treatment (antidepressant or counseling) | |
Ell et al., 2010 (42) | Los Angeles | Community public safety-net clinics providing diabetes care | 387 | ≥18 | 96% Hispanics | Depressive symptoms | Receipt of depression treatment (antidepressant or counseling) | |
Joo et al., 2010 (29) | New York, Philadelphia, and Pittsburgh | Primary care clinics | 582 | ≥60 | 28% African Americans; 72% whites | Major and minor depression | Use of psychotherapy or health care services during 2-year follow-up | |
Nicolaidis et al., 2013 (21) | Portland, Oregon | Domestic violence drop- in center | 59 | ≥18 | African Americans | Depressive symptoms | Attitudes toward depression; acceptability of antidepressants and mental health counseling | |
Wells et al., 2012 (31), and Ngo et al., 2009 (32) | Los Angeles | Primary care clinics | 418 | 13–21 | 17.3% African Americans; 65.5% Hispanics or Latinos | Depressive symptoms | Use of specialty mental health care | |
Wells et al., 2004 (30) | Multiple sites | Primary care practices | 1,356 | ≥18 | Whites, Latinos, African Americans | Depressive symptoms | Primary care or mental health specialty care visits; counseling; antidepressant use | |
Yeung et al., 2010 (47) | Boston | Primary care setting | 100 | ≥18 | Chinese Americans | Major depressive disorder | Percentage treated by psychiatrists |
Racial-Ethnic Differences in the Initiation of Mental Health Care
Intervention type and study | Intervention component | Racial-ethnic differences examined | Study design | Cultural adaptation | Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Evidence of disparities reduction | |||||
Screening and referral | |||||
Cohen et al., 2003 (27) | Depression screening and referral to a nursing home psychiatrist for diagnosis confirmation and treatment plan development | Yes | Controlled experimental trial | na | Patients in intervention group received more prescriptions of antidepressants after the intervention (p<.001); no pre-post difference in control group; no group difference in the total percentages of individuals who began or continued taking antidepressants; after intervention, significant increase in receipt of antidepressants among nonwhites (p=.002) |
Colocation | |||||
Ayalon et al., 2007 (15) | Primary Care Research in Substance Abuse and Mental Health for the Elderly (PRISMe); integration of mental health treatment into primary care clinics | Yes | Site-specific analysis of multisite randomized controlled trial | na | African-American older adults in intervention significantly more likely than the control group to visit providers of mental health or substance abuse services; no significant difference between intervention and control groups among white older adults; both African Americans and whites in intervention took less time to engage in first visit for mental health or substance abuse services after baseline evaluation |
Collaborative care | |||||
Areán et al., 2008 (16), and Bartels et al., 2004 (17) | PRISMe; integration of mental health treatment into primary care clinics; multisite, randomized controlled study | Yes | Multisite randomized controlled trial | na | Rate of mental health and substance abuse treatment access greater in integrated care versus enhanced referral model (p<.05); except for Asian older adults, participants more likely to access mental health or substance abuse services in the integrated care model, despite the availability of case managers linking two services; no significant interaction in overall analysis based on race-ethnicity; after controlling for mental distress, the analyses showed that Asians in integrated care had lower odds of accessing mental health care (p<.001), compared with the referral (control) group, whereas Latinos in integrated care group had 3.6 greater odds of accessing mental health or substance abuse care compared with those in the control group (p<.001). Whites, African Americans, and Latinos in integrated care had greater number of visits for mental health or substance abuse services, compared with those in the control group (p<.001). |
Areán et al., 2005 (28) | Improving Mood–Promoting Access to Collaborative Treatment (IMPACT), a multisite, collaborative, stepped-care randomized trial for managing depression | Yes | Multisite, randomized controlled trial | Elderly people from various ethnic backgrounds were shown in the educational video and written materials | Participants from racial-ethnic minority groups in the intervention received more antidepressants or psychotherapy than those in the control group (p=.003 for antidepressants; p=.002 for psychotherapy), especially for Latinos (p=.015 for antidepressants; p=.005 for psychotherapy). Among African Americans, use of antidepressants was not statistically higher in the intervention group, but the use of psychotherapy increased among participants in the intervention compared with the control group (p=.001). |
Joo et al., 2010 (29) | Prevention of Suicide in Primary Care Elderly, a group-randomized controlled trial comparing a primary care–based intervention with usual care to improve depression outcomes | Yes | Group-randomized controlled trial | na | African Americans with minor depression, but not with major depression, significantly less likely than whites to use psychotherapy (p<.05). African Americans in the intervention group more likely to use psychotherapy, but the difference did not reach statistical significance |
Wells et al., 2012 (31), and Ngo et al., 2009 (32) | Youth Partners in Care (PIC), a quality improvement intervention in which case managers support primary care providers with patient evaluation, education, medication, and psychosocial treatment and linkage to specialty mental health services | Yes | Randomized controlled trial | Trained staff in cultural sensitivity issues and tailored examples to fit the cultural context of youth and family. Language compatibility | Youths in the intervention group significantly more likely to receive at least 6 specialty counseling visits or antidepressants in 6 months than the usual care group. Among African Americans, the intervention group used any psychotherapy or counseling from specialty or primary care significantly more than the control group (p=.036). Latinos had marginally significant improvement in specialty care access (p<.05). Other mental health service use patterns in primary care or use of medication not significant across race-ethnicity |
Wells et al., 2004 (30) | PIC, a group-level, randomized controlled trial of quality improvement programs for depression with the use of collaborative care | Yes | Multisite randomized controlled trial | Physicians and patients from racial-ethnic minority groups were shown in video materials. Cognitive-behavioral therapy was developed for low-income members of racial-ethnic minority groups. Practices were provided bilingually. Staff trained in cultural sensitivity for depression treatment | PIC therapy significantly reduced unmet need for receiving antidepressants and psychotherapy among African Americans and Latinos. Use of medication marginally improved for African Americans and Latinos (p=.07). |
No evidence of disparities reduction | |||||
Natural experiment | |||||
Adams et al., 2015 (33) | As part of Medicaid Part D, certain states lifted drug caps that had restricted the number of reimbursable prescriptions | Yes | Quasi-experimental trial | na | Antidepressant use increased for both whites and African Americans in states that omitted drug caps (p<.001) after implementation of Medicare Part D (p<.001). Disparities between whites and African Americans in antidepressant use increased in drug cap states (p<.01) because of increase in drug use among nonelderly whites. For non–drug cap states, antidepressant use slightly declined (p=.007) and disparities between whites and African Americans slightly decreased because of lower drug use among whites (p<.05). |
Screening and referral | |||||
Rausch et al., 2012 (38) | Depression screening by medical assistants at clinics, confirmed by primary care provider. Patient referral to mental health professionals, if necessary | No, minority group only | Single arm, pre-post | Spanish language for screening | Eighty screened patients (13%) were referred to mental health services. No baseline referral rate measured. Change in provider attitudes: discomfort or uncertainty in addressing adolescent depression decreased (p=.06); providers who could identify depression in their patients significantly increased (p<.05); significant increase in N of providers who felt that patients were comfortable addressing depressive symptoms with them (p<.05) and who felt that that they could make an urgent mental health appointment (p<.01) |
Psychoeducation | |||||
Alvidrez et al., 2005 (22) | Individual psychoeducation about psychotherapy entry and attendance tailored for older African Americans | No, minority group only | Historical comparison | Intervention developed from focus groups regarding perceptions of psychotherapy. Some racial-ethnic concordance between psychoeducators and patients | Similar proportion of patients starting therapy in both groups, but psychoeducation participants attended significantly more psychotherapy sessions. Qualitative interviews revealed that racial-ethnic concordance between psychoeducator and patient made no difference in helpfulness. Psychoeducation helped patients bring up concerns about treatment and discussion on ethnic, cultural, or religious issues |
Hernandez and Organista, 2013 (19) | Fotonovela called Secret Feelings, a form of entertainment education to increase depression literacy, decrease stigma, and increase help-seeking knowledge and behavior | No, minority group only | Controlled experimental trial | Use of promotoras for Spanish language compatibility; reading the text out loud for illiterate participants | Depression knowledge improved significantly more in experimental group than control group. No difference in stigma toward mental health treatment between experimental and control groups. Antidepressant stigma decreased significantly in experimental compared with control group. Self-efficacy to identify need for treatment significantly increased among experimental versus control group. Experimental group had higher intention to seek treatment compared with control group, but the difference was not statistically significant |
Unger et al., 2013 (23) | Fotonovela called Secret Feelings, a form of entertainment education to increase depression literacy, decrease stigma, and increase help-seeking knowledge and behavior | No, minority group only | Controlled experimental trial | Read the NIH low-literacy text pamphlet about depression, which conveys similar information without the narrative format | Depression knowledge significantly improved in experimental group versus control group. At 1-month follow up, group difference was even greater. Antidepressant stigma reduced significantly more in the experimental versus the control group, and the difference reached borderline significance at 1-month follow-up. Self-efficacy increased significantly for both groups and remained high at 1-month follow up. No group difference in the willingness to seek care |
Casas et al., 2014 (24) | La CLAve (The Clue), a 35-minute psychoeducation program with the goal of increasing Spanish-speaking persons' literacy of psychosis | No, minority group only | Single arm, pre-post | Integrated popular cultural icons derived from music, art, videos, and mnemonic device | Postintervention: higher knowledge of psychosis (p<.001); increase in participants' attributions to psychosis in the hypothetical story (p<.001) and depression (p=.014); participants made more recommendations for professional resources (p<.001) and less to social resources (p<.001) |
Lopez et al., 2009 (25) | La CLAve (The Clue), a 35-minute psychoeducation program with the goal of increasing Spanish-speaking persons' literacy of psychosis | No, minority group only | Single arm, pre-post | Spanish language for songs and stories | Community residents were less likely to suggest family members to seek personal solutions (p=.001) and more likely to suggest professional solution (p=.008). No significant changes in caregivers' recommended help seeking |
Teng and Friedman, 2009 (26) | Educational community intervention to increase awareness of mental health and available resources | No, minority group only | Single arm, pre-post | Use of Mandarin; focus on mind-body connection | Attitudes about depression treatment improved significantly. Inclination to seek mental health professionals increased significantly. No difference in preferences for seeking out general physicians or spiritual counselors for help |
Tran et al., 2014 (20) | Amigas Latinas Motivando el Alma/Latina (Friends of Motivating the Soul), promotora training and outreach to Latinas in their social network for mental health–resource sharing | No, minority group only | Single arm, pre-post | Outreach to promotoras' social network; use of Spanish language; incorporating perceptions and experiences of participants into core intervention components | Modest improvement in attitudes about depression treatment postintervention, suggesting community-level stigma reduction |
Colocation | |||||
Chong and Moreno, 2012 (39) | Psychiatrists providing telepsychiatry services at a community health center | No, minority group only | Randomized controlled trial | Project recruiter was Mexican American; bilingual Hispanic psychiatrists provided telepsychiatry; easily accessible to public transportation; undermined stigma due to provision of depression treatment in a medical clinic | Intervention participants significantly more likely to make mental health appointments and use antidepressants. More intervention than control group participants were willing to pay the same or more for telepsychiatry than for a primary care visit |
Kataoka et al., 2007 (34) | Youth suicide prevention program, a school-based program that trains school staff as crisis team members | Yes | No control, program evaluation | na | Of 68 parents whose children used a school gatekeeper training program for suicide prevention, 50 (53%) used community mental health services and 37 (39%) used school mental health services. Latino students had lower rates of using community mental health services compared with non-Latinos, but there was no difference in school-based mental health service use |
Care management | |||||
Boyd et al., 2015 (35) | Behavioral health referral intervention. Referral to improve access to care based on identification of barriers, effective solutions, and systematic follow-up. Case management with the addition of specific psychoeducation modules | No | Single arm, pre-post | Reminder calls, facilitated transportation, and case manager available to attend appointment | Twenty-nine (76%) women scheduled an appointment for behavioral health treatment and 21 (55%) attended a behavioral health appointment by the postintervention follow-up |
Chinman et al., 2000 (13) | Access to Community Care and Effective Services and Support (ACCESS), a federally funded demonstration of the effectiveness of a systems-integrating strategy using assertive community treatment for homeless adults with mental illness | No | No control, program evaluation | Clinician-client racial matching for African Americans and whites | Significant improvement in the reception of psychiatric care at follow-up. No significant difference in access to outpatient psychiatric service by racial concordance of case managers and clients |
Horvitz-Lennon et al., 2011 (14) | ACCESS (see above) | Yes | No control, program evaluation | Clinician-client racial matching for African Americans and whites | Probability of using psychiatric care increased over time but did not differ across race-ethnicity |
Uebelacker et al., 2011 (41) | Depression Health Enhancement for Latino Patients, a telephone depression care management intervention | No, minority group only | Randomized controlled trial | Instruments available in Spanish; bilingual/bicultural depression care managers chosen for their professionalism and warmth | No group difference in the number of outpatient visits for behavioral health or the use of antidepressant medications. During posttreatment, there was a trend for the intervention group to have fewer days of antidepressant use (p<.10). |
Yeung et al., 2004 (40) | South Cove Bridge Project, colocation of collaboration between mental health services and primary care, with a primary care nurse as care manager | No, minority group only | Historical comparison | Training of primary care physicians (PCPs) and nurses in cultural sensitivity, including discussion of Asian Americans' common illness beliefs, help-seeking behaviors, and attitudes toward mental disorders and mental health services. Handouts with nonstigmatizing translations of psychiatric terminologies. The PCPs and nurse had opportunities to rehearse how to explain mental disorders to patients without eliciting resentment | PCPs referred 64 clinical patients (1.1%) to mental health services, a 60% increase (p<.05) in the percentage of clinic patients referred in the previous year; 81% of patients referred during the project received psychiatric evaluation, compared with 53% (p<.001) in the previous year |
Collaborative care | |||||
Cooper et al., 2013 (46) | Blacks Receiving Interventions for Depression and Gaining Empowerment. Compared standard collaborative care with a patient-centered and culturally tailored collaborative care intervention | No, minority group only | Cluster-randomized controlled trial | Tailored collaborative care management focused on access barriers, social context, and patient-provider relationship for participants and participatory communication skills training and mental health consultation for providers | Patient attitudes to readiness for treatment were significantly higher in standard compared with tailored collaborative care group (p=.02). Perceived effectiveness of antidepressants was higher among standard compared with tailored collaborative care group (p=.06). N of patients taking any antidepressants remained low regardless of intervention assignment. Reception of any counseling marginally significantly increased for tailored group pre- and postintervention, but no pre-post difference found for standard collaborative care group. Receipt of any treatment marginally increased over time for standard group but not for tailored group. Significant increase in receipt of guideline-concordant pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy (p=.049 and p=.07 respectively) for standard collaborative care group while only marginal increase in receipt of psychotherapy (p=.05) for tailored collaborative care group. Between-group comparisons from baseline to 12 months not statistically significant for any type of depression treatment |
Ell et al., 2011 (44), and Ell et al., 2008 (45) | Alleviating Depression Among Patients with Cancer (ADAPt-C), adapted from IMPACT, a collaborative, stepped-care model | No, minority group only | Randomized controlled trial | Bilingual social workers and problem-solving therapy aligned with perceived stress-related needs and cultural values aimed at stigma reduction | Patients in ADAPt-C group received significantly greater depression treatment (N=10, antidepressants; N=94, psychotherapy; N=71, both) compared with the control group (N=13, antidepressants; N=4, psychotherapy; N=7, both) (p<.001). At 1-year follow-up, patients with recurrence of major depression in the intervention group significantly more likely to receive depression treatment compared with patients with major depression in control group (p=.03). At 1-year follow-up, enhanced care group compared with intervention group had significantly greater receipt of antidepressants, likely because of oncologists’ being informed of patient depression status. No difference in receipt of antidepressants or counseling observed at 2-year follow-up |
Ell et al., 2010 (42) | Multifaceted diabetes and depression program (MDDP), socioculturally adapted collaborative care with a stepped-care treatment algorithm | No, minority group only | Randomized controlled trial | Bilingual social workers and problem-solving therapy aligned with perceived stress-related needs and cultural values aimed at stigma reduction | At 1-year follow up, MDDP patients significantly more likely to receive antidepressants than patients in control group (p=.02). No significant difference in the receipt of psychotherapy or counseling between intervention and control groups |
Nicolaidis et al., 2013 (21) | The Interconnection Project, a community-based, chronic care management intervention for African-American survivors of interpersonal violence. A peer health advocate served as a care manager and used motivational interviewing to help women set and meet self-management goals | No, minority group only | Single arm, pre-post | Program based within a partnering community agency and led by a health advocate | Attitudes about depression significantly improved after intervention (p=.02) and use of counseling marginally improved (p=.05). No difference in seeking depression care, using antidepressants, acceptability of antidepressants, and acceptability of counseling |
Chung et al., 2014 (36), and Wells et al., 2013 (37) | Community Partners in Care, a group-level, randomized comparative effectiveness trial of Community Engagement and Planning (CEP) to implement depression care quality improvement | No | Group-randomized controlled trial | Collaborative planning and implementation across community programs; diverse agencies encouraged to develop a strategy and training plan to jointly provide care for depression | CEP reduced behavioral health hospitalization compared with control group (p<.05). No statistically significant difference shown in the rate of ≥2 emergency room visits by intervention status. Any primary care or public health depression visits or specialty care visits (psychiatrists and mental health providers) did not differ significantly by intervention status; 6-month (short-term) effect on decreasing the use of behavioral health hospitalization in CEP (p<.05) but less evident effect at 12 months |
Yeung et al., 2010 (47) | Culturally sensitive collaborative treatment (CSCT). A cultural component was added to the collaborative management model | No, minority group only | Randomized controlled trial | Used engagement interview protocol, a culturally sensitive psychiatric assessment, to explore patient's illness beliefs | No significant difference in stigma score and percentage treated by psychiatrists between intervention and control groups. Before CSCT intervention, 7% of patients who were screened for depression received psychiatric treatment; after CSCT intervention, 43% of those screened positive for depression engaged in psychiatric assessment (a nearly sevenfold increase) |
Cultural Adaptation
Mental Health Interventions
Policy change as a natural experiment.
Screening and referral.
Psychoeducation.
Colocation of mental health services.
Care or case management.
Collaborative care.
Risk of Bias Assessment
Risk of bias | |||
---|---|---|---|
Intervention type | Low | Unclear | High |
Collaborative care | 9 | 0 | 1 |
Psychoeducation | 1 | 1 | 5 |
Case management | 1 | 1 | 3 |
Colocation of mental health services | 3 | 0 | 1 |
Screening and referral | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Medicaid policy change as a natural experiment | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Discussion
Conclusions
Acknowledgments
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