Mental disorders are common and undertreated among youths (
1,
2). Medicaid is the largest insurer of youths (
3), and research has identified a number of access-related barriers to mental health treatment for Medicaid-enrolled youths (
4–
8). Researchers and policy makers have highlighted the potential of federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) and rural health clinics (RHCs)—collectively referred to as primary care safety-net clinics—to address access-related barriers to mental health treatment (
9,
10).
FQHCs and RHCs are safety-net facilities that provide primary care to underserved populations, including Medicaid enrollees. These clinics are located in federally designated Health Professional Shortage Areas, receive favorable reimbursement rates from Medicaid, and are eligible for participation in federal initiatives, such as loan repayment programs (
11,
12). These two programs differ from one another on certain key dimensions; FQHCs have greater requirements than do RHCs for staffing and service offerings, and RHCs must be located in nonurbanized areas (
11,
12). Over 10,000 FQHC sites and 4,100 RHCs deliver primary care to communities across the country (
13).
Primary care safety-net clinics have the potential to improve access-related barriers to mental health treatment for Medicaid-enrolled youths. First, these clinics can address geographic barriers to care, because more than three-fourths of counties that lack any specialty mental health treatment facility have at least one primary care safety-net clinic (
7). Second, for some families, these clinics may help reduce stigma associated with seeking services in a separate mental health specialty setting (
10). Finally, FQHCs are required by law to offer enabling services to address access-related barriers, such as transportation, translation and interpretation, and insurance enrollment (
14,
15).
Research has found that the percentage of FQHCs that offer specialty mental health services on site has increased substantially in the past 2 decades (
16,
17). There is, however, little information about the role of primary care safety-net clinics in providing mental health services to Medicaid-enrolled youths. We addressed this gap by using Medicaid claims data to identify two cohorts of youths—those with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and those with depression, two of the most common mental disorders in the child and adolescent population (
1,
2). In each cohort, we described the percentage that received mental health care in a primary care safety-net clinic and examined the correlates associated with receipt of mental health treatment in these settings. For each cohort, we also examined several measures of care quality in primary care safety-net settings.
Methods
Data
Data came from the 2008–2010 Medicaid Analytic eXtract (MAX) Files for nine states (Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia). The MAX Files include information on Medicaid eligibility, health care utilization, and enrollee demographic characteristics. Researchers have evaluated the completeness and accuracy of managed care data in the MAX files for each state (
18–
20), and the states included in this study have sufficiently complete managed care claims for use in data analysis.
The MAX Files with enrollee information were merged with three additional files to obtain taxonomy codes that could be used to identify visits in primary care safety-net clinics. These files included the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) MAX Provider Characteristics (MAXPC) file (
21), the National Provider Identifier (NPI) Data File (
22), and the CMS Provider of Services (POS) file (
23). We also merged measures from the Area Health Resources File (
24).
Cohorts
We used specifications from the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) guidelines (
25) and prior literature (
26) to derive a cohort of youths (ages 6–12) with a diagnosis of ADHD (i.e., at least two claims with an ADHD diagnosis code [
ICD-9-CM codes 314.00 and 314.01]) who initiated ADHD medication for the first time between January 1, 2010, and February 28, 2010 (N=6,433). We identified those with continuous Medicaid enrollment from the time they were first observed in the database through the end of the treatment initiation period (with an allowable administrative gap up to 30 days) and without a fill for an ADHD medication for at least 120 days prior to medication initiation (i.e., the HEDIS-defined exclusion period) (
25).
Next, we derived a cohort of youths (ages 5–17) with an incident diagnosis of depression between January 1, 2010, and August 8, 2010 (N=13,209). Our cohort included those with at least two claims with a depression diagnosis code (
ICD-9-CM codes 296.2, 296.3, 300.4, and 311) on different days in 2010. We identified those with continuous Medicaid enrollment from the time they were first observed in the database through the end of the study period (with an allowable administrative gap of up to 30 days) and without any encounters with a depression diagnosis code or a fill for an antidepressant medication for at least 90 days prior to the index diagnosis (i.e., the exclusion period used in prior literature [
27]). In both cohorts, we excluded those with dual Medicare eligibility, an inpatient claim for mental health or substance abuse treatment, multiple county codes, or missing information on control variables.
Safety-Net Measure
To derive measures of mental health treatment in primary care safety-net clinics, we used codes from the MAX files, including place-of-service codes (03, 50, 53, and 72), type-of-program codes (03, 04), revenue codes (521, 522, 524, 525, 527, and 528), and procedure code (T1015); taxonomy codes from the MAXPC file and NPI Data File (261QF0400x and 261QR1300x); and provider category codes (12, 21) from the CMS POS file. Using these codes, we created two categorical variables for ADHD- and depression-related visits (i.e., visits with a primary or secondary diagnosis of one of these conditions). The first measure identified those who did not receive any ADHD- or depression-related visits in a primary care safety-net clinic (FQHC or RHC), those who received some but not a majority of ADHD- or depression-related visits in a primary care safety-net clinic, and those who received the majority of ADHD- or depression-related visits in a primary care safety-net clinic. Next, we classified youths in each cohort into those who did not receive any ADHD- or depression-related visits in a primary care safety-net clinic, those who received any ADHD- or depression-related visits in an FQHC, and those who received ADHD- or depression-related visits in a primary care safety-net clinic exclusively from an RHC (i.e., no visit in an FQHC). (Bivariate and regression analyses examining correlates associated with mental health treatment in primary care safety-net settings using this second measure are available in an online supplement. For those who received any ADHD- or depression-related visits in a primary care safety-net facility, we also provide information in the online supplement about psychotherapy visits received inside and outside these settings.)
Quality of Care
On the basis of HEDIS specifications and prior literature (
25,
26), we derived three measures to assess adequate follow-up care and medication continuity after the child initiated ADHD medication. The first measure assessed adequate follow-up care in the initiation phase of ADHD medication treatment (i.e., the first 30 days after initiating medication), which was defined as at least one visit with a health care provider during this period. The second measure assessed continuous medication treatment, defined by HEDIS as those who filled medication for 210 of the 300-day continuation and maintenance (C&M) phase following the 30-day medication initiation period (
28). We analyzed this outcome measure for a subgroup with continuous Medicaid enrollment in the C&M phase (N=5,968). The third measure assessed adequate follow-up care in the C&M phase, defined as receiving at least two additional health care visits in the 300-day C&M phase. This outcome measure was assessed for those with continuous enrollment and continuous medication in the C&M phase (N=2,370).
In the cohort with an index depression diagnosis, we used specifications from prior research (
27,
29) to create indicators for youths who received minimally adequate psychotherapy (four or more individual, family, or group psychotherapy sessions outside an inpatient setting in the 12 weeks following initiation of treatment), minimally adequate medication treatment (antidepressant medication for ≥84 of the 144 days following initiation), and minimally adequate treatment (receipt of minimally adequate psychotherapy or minimally adequate medication treatment).
Covariates
Individual-level measures.
We assessed predisposing (age, gender, and race-ethnicity), enabling (Medicaid health plan type [
29,
30]), and need-related characteristics (basis of Medicaid eligibility and comorbidities) that may be correlated with receipt of mental health treatment in a primary care safety-net clinic or the quality of care received (
31) (see table in
online supplement for details).
County-level measures.
Contextual-level enabling characteristics (
31) included the percentage of county residents living in an urban area (2000) (
32) and living in poverty (2008). We also examined the per capita (100,000 population) number of primary care safety-net clinics (FQHCs and RHCs) (2008), primary care physicians (2010), and psychologists (2009).
Analysis
We conducted bivariate analyses using Wald tests and multivariate analyses using generalized ordered logistic regressions to examine the correlates of mental health treatment in a primary care safety-net clinic. Next, we conducted bivariate analyses using Wald tests and multiple logistic regression analyses to examine whether the receipt of mental health care in one of these settings was correlated with quality measures. Regression models controlled for covariates described above; these analyses also included state indicators, and standard errors were clustered at the county level.
Discussion
Children living in counties with a higher percentage of residents living in an urban area were less likely to receive mental health treatment in a primary care safety-net clinic than those in counties with a lower percentage of residents in an urban area, which adds to prior literature highlighting the potential of primary care safety-net clinics to fill gaps in the mental health treatment system outside urban areas (
7). Our findings also shed light on the role of RHCs in this infrastructure, because more than half of youths initiating ADHD medication in a primary care safety-net clinic sought treatment exclusively from an RHC (versus an FQHC). Because RHCs are required to be located in nonurbanized areas (
11), many RHCs serve populations living in communities with extremely limited (if any) mental health care resources (
5).
In the cohort that initiated ADHD medication, there was a negative association between having diagnosed comorbid mental disorders and receiving the majority of ADHD-related visits in a primary care safety-net setting. Similarly, in the cohort with an index depression diagnosis, there was a negative association between having any diagnosis of major depression and receiving the majority of visits in a primary care safety-net clinic. Together, these findings add to prior literature indicating that primary care safety-net clinics may serve those with less severe mental health needs, compared with individuals treated in other settings (
16). Another possible explanation, however, may involve coding practices. If providers in primary care safety-net clinics are less likely to enter secondary diagnosis codes for mental disorders into the medical record (regardless of the underlying severity of mental health needs), this may also account for some of the differences in diagnosed comorbidities in the ADHD cohort
Our results also indicate that enrollment in comprehensive managed care plans (compared with enrollment in fee-for-service plans) was negatively associated with the receipt of most ADHD- or depression-related visits in primary care safety-net clinics. This association may be explained by multiple mechanisms, including greater enrollment in comprehensive managed care plans in urban areas (
33) (where RHCs are not located) and more complete coding practices by providers in areas and states served by comprehensive managed care plans (
34).
Compared with youths who received no visits in primary care safety-net clinics, youths who received most of their ADHD- or depression-related visits in these clinics received lower quality care on five of the six outcome measures examined. These findings diverge from prior literature reporting that the quality of care for patients treated in primary care safety-net clinics (FQHCs in particular) is comparable to national averages or to the care received by those treated in other physician offices (
35,
36). Our findings may represent unmeasured differences in child- or family-level characteristics (such as need or preferences for services) between those seeking care in different settings. It is also possible that primary care safety-net clinics have fewer staff with specialty training needed to serve youths with mental health needs. Nevertheless, it is worth noting that the outcome measures used in this study were based either on specifications from the HEDIS performance measurement database (
28,
37) or on clinical guidelines (
38,
39). Thus these measures represent important targets that any health care setting or provider should aim to achieve.
The results also suggest that primary care safety-net clinics played a relatively small role in the provision of mental health services to youths during the study period (2008–2010). The percentage of primary care safety-net clinics offering specialty mental health services has increased in recent years (
18), and the federal government has invested considerable resources to help primary care safety-net clinics expand their capacity to offer mental health services (
40). In fiscal year 2017, the Health Resources and Services Administration awarded more than $200 million for behavioral health expansion grants to 1,178 health centers and 13 rural health organizations to increase access to substance abuse and mental health services (
40–
42). Future studies should assess whether this investment has translated into an expansion of behavioral health services in primary care safety-net settings for the child and adolescent population.
Several limitations of this study should be acknowledged. First, the data are several years old, and the findings from these states may not generalize to other states. Second, there were unmeasured organization-level characteristics, including the demographic composition of the practice or clinic (e.g., age composition) and whether the practice or clinic had any collaborative care relationships with mental health providers outside the practice. Third, coding errors in administrative claims databases may result in measurement error (
43). Finally, because the data are cross-sectional, causality cannot be inferred from these analyses.