Even though depression is a leading cause of morbidity in the United States (
1), it continues to be undertreated in racial-ethnic minority populations. African Americans and Latinos are less likely than non-Hispanic whites to receive depression care and less likely to receive high-quality care (
2). Between 2008 and 2012, only 30% of African Americans and 27% of Latinos with any past-year mental illness used mental health services, compared with 46% of non-Hispanic whites (
3). Low rates of use among African Americans and Latinos have been attributed to many factors, including cost, lack of insurance, language barriers, and limited availability of culturally competent providers (
3,
4). Disparities are greater when country of origin is taken into account, and Latinos and blacks not born in the United States have even lower rates of use of mental health care (
5–
7). Even when analyses control for socioeconomic status, insurance, and transportation barriers, African Americans and Latinos are less likely than whites to receive guideline-concordant care (
8–
10).
Increasingly, community-partnered engagement strategies are recognized as innovative approaches to reducing disparities (
11). In underserved minority populations, such approaches could increase access. Faith-based organizations (FBOs) frequently play a major role in community engagement efforts and may be seen as trusted, nontraditional community institutions to address disparities, particularly given that most African Americans and Latinos report a formal religious affiliation.
FBOs, either religious or spiritual, are increasingly selected as sites for health promotion programs in underresourced communities (
12,
13). FBOs have a long history of providing healing for psychological illnesses (
14,
15) and continue to play a role in the mental health services delivery system (
16). Research has found that among past-year users of mental health services, 8.1% reported being treated by a human service provider, which included a religious or spiritual advisor in a nonmental health setting (
17,
18). Despite the role of FBOs, limited data exist on the extent to which African-American and Hispanic service users rely on FBOs for mental health care, the types of care provided by FBOs, and how this care is related to the use of formal mental health services. In underresourced communities, people with depression may be receiving diverse health, social, or community services that may or may not be coordinated; yet these services may constitute the extended service network used and trusted within the community, including services provided by FBOs.
This study aimed to assess the role of FBO depression services as part of the extended services received in Los Angeles, the type of support FBOs provide, and the characteristics of persons receiving FBO depression care, including their mental health needs and use of traditional services. This information could lead to targeted and coordinated strategies by both FBOs and formal mental health providers to increase access and treatment among African Americans and Latinos with depression in underresourced communities.
Methods
This study drew from baseline data from Community Partners in Care (CPIC), a group-randomized comparative effectiveness trial that compared a community engagement and planning approach with technical assistance to improve depression services in two predominately African-American and Hispanic underresourced communities in Los Angeles (
19,
20). CPIC was designed and implemented by the CPIC council by using a community-partnered participatory approach (
21). The CPIC council included 35 leaders from three academic and 24 community-based agencies. This study was approved by the institutional review boards of RAND and participating agencies. CPIC council members identified agencies and organizations in five settings for study inclusion. Settings included outpatient primary care, outpatient mental health services, substance abuse residential and outpatient services, social and housing services for homeless persons, and other social and community-based services, which included six FBOs. Eligible programs had to serve 15 or more clients per week, have one or more staff members, be financially stable, and could not focus on psychotic disorders or services provided in clients’ homes. Participants were recruited and screened for depression across study sites from March 2010 to November 2010; procedures oversampled for African Americans. Of the 4,645 adults (ages 18 and older) approached, 4,440 (96%) agreed to the screening. Individuals with moderate to severe depression, as indicated by a score ≥10 on the eight-item Patient Health Questionnaire, who were willing to provide contact information were eligible to participate (
19,
22,
23). Of the 4,440 screened, 1,322 (30%) were eligible, of whom 1,246 (94%) consented and enrolled. Between April 2010 and January 2011, 981 enrolled clients (79%) completed baseline telephone surveys (two were deceased, 36 refused, and 227 were not reached). The study reported here included only African Americans, Hispanics, and whites in this sample (N= 947).
Measures
Sociodemographic variables.
The screener collected the following sociodemographic information: age, gender, marital status, education, employment status, a combined race-ethnicity and nativity variable (U.S.-born Hispanic, non–U.S.-born Hispanic, African-American non-Hispanic, non-Hispanic white, and other).
Mental health and health status.
Using the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (
24), we created indicators for current (two weeks) major depression episode, current or recent (past month) anxiety disorder (panic attacks, social anxiety disorder, or posttraumatic stress disorder), and lifetime diagnosis of mania (
20). From survey data, we categorized chronic general medical conditions as three or more or fewer than three out of 18 such conditions and derived an indicator for lifetime diagnosis of or hospitalization for psychosis.
Mental health service and medication use.
Retrospective, self-report data were used to develop indicators of use of mental health care in the past six months. This included receipt of information, referral, counseling, or medication management for depression or emotional problems as follows: outpatient mental health services; outpatient primary care for depression; a substance abuse clinic visit with a mental health service; and an emergency room visit for alcohol, drug, or mental health problem. Indicators were also developed for use of any psychiatric medication, including antidepressants, antianxiety medications, or any psychiatric drug, for two or more months in the past six months.
Receipt of depression care from FBOs.
To assess receipt of depression care from FBOs, respondents were asked, “During the past six months, did you go to any religious or spiritual places, such as a church, mosque, temple, or synagogue?” Respondents who answered no were categorized as “did not attend a religious place.” Those who answered yes were stratified as having attended a religious place and further categorized as having or not having received FBO depression care. Receipt of FBO depression care was defined as a report that an FBO provided any of the following: talked about depression, stress, or emotions or gave information, such as a brochure; suggested visiting a specialist or program for depression, stress, or emotions; suggested taking medications or encouraged the respondent to stay on a treatment plan for depression, stress, or emotions; spent more than five minutes counseling about these issues; or gave suggestions about how to cope or encouragement to do things that the respondent enjoyed.
Analysis
Sample characteristics were described with means and standard deviations for continuous variables and percentages for categorical variables, for the overall sample and for FBO depression care status (that is, those who did not attend a religious place, those who attended but did not receive FBO depression care, and those who attended and received FBO depression care). To examine differences in sample characteristics by FBO depression care status, we fit linear regression models for continuous variables, logistic regression models for dichotomous variables, and a multinomial regression model for predictors of FBO depression care status. Wald chi-square tests were used for overall tests of differences among the three status groups and for the entire sample. Two pairwise comparisons were done: those who received FBO depression care were compared with those who did not attend a religious place and with those who attended a religious place but did not receive FBO depression care. Comparisons were based on regression coefficients, with a Bonferroni correction for two tests.
For the participants in the three status groups, we fit multinomial logistic regression models. Any variable for which the significant univariate test was p<.25 was selected as a candidate for the multivariate analysis (
25). The final multinomial logistic regression was performed fitting the following variables against a two-tailed test (p<.05) plus age and gender as covariates: race-ethnicity by U.S.-born status; a lifetime diagnosis of mania; any outpatient primary care for depression; any substance abuse visit with a mental health service; and any emergency room visit for alcohol, drug, or mental health problem. To examine the association between attendance at a religious place and receipt of FBO depression care, we performed a logistic regression analysis among participants who attended a religious place. Any variable that was significant in the univariate analysis at p<.25 was selected as a candidate for the multivariate analysis (
25). The final model included age, gender, race-ethnicity by U.S.-born status, attendance at a religious place, current major depression episode, a lifetime diagnosis of mania, and receipt of antianxiety medication.
To control for potential response bias, attrition weights were constructed on the basis of characteristics of the eligible sample (
26). For item-level missing data, we used an extended hot-deck multiple imputation that was based on the predictive mean matching method (
27,
28). We imputed five data sets, averaged results, and adjusted standard errors for uncertainty resulting from imputation (
28). All analyses used Taylor series linearization available in the complex sample module in SUDAAN software (version 11.01) and accounted for clustering, weighting, and multiple imputations.
Discussion
This study examined the extent to which primarily African-American and Hispanic participants in two underresourced Los Angeles communities used depression services from FBOs in the prior six months and the sociodemographic and clinical factors associated with receipt of these services. We found that a substantial proportion (more than 24%) of African-American and Hispanic participants had received FBO depression services. Among all participants who received FBO depression services, about a third reported that someone encouraged them to visit a specialist or to take their medications and stay on a treatment plan for depression. These findings are in contrast to studies that have raised concerns that FBOs may discourage individuals from seeking formal mental health services (
29,
30). For example, some studies have suggested that persons attending FBOs may be advised to rely on spiritual coping strategies, such as prayer, for their mental health needs (
30). Our findings indicate that FBO depression services, as defined in this study, can play a substantial role in promoting use of formal mental health services for those in need of treatment (
14,
31).
Consistent with previous studies, our study found that clients who used FBO depression services had significantly higher mental health needs than those who did not use these services (
15,
32). Specifically, we found that African-American and Hispanic participants who used FBO depression services were more likely than those who attended a religious place but did not use such services to have a recent major depressive episode, a current anxiety disorder, or a lifetime diagnosis of mania or to have been given a diagnosis of or been hospitalized for psychosis. Younger age was another important independent correlate of use of FBO depression services, suggesting that FBO services may be particularly important for young adults with high mental health needs in racial-ethnic minority populations. Given our finding of the high level of mental health needs among users of FBO depression services, along with our finding that clients perceived FBO service providers as supportive of referral and adherence to formal treatment services and prior evidence suggesting that clergy are interested in implementing depression services if they have appropriate training (
33,
34), it is important to support the capacity of FBO leaders and service providers to conduct depression screening and make appropriate referrals. Enhancing collaborations between FBOs and formal health sectors might enhance the effectiveness of FBOs in improving access to treatments (
14,
31,
35). Such strategies may help decrease the current gap between need and use of traditional services, which disproportionately affects persons from racial-ethnic minority groups (
6).
Our findings appear to suggest that FBO services largely complement traditional mental health care, rather than replacing it. Specifically, the FBO services described were largely related to referral to or encouragement to adhere to traditional services. In addition, participants who received FBO depression services were high utilizers of primary care depression services, consistent with some prior studies (
36). Although other studies have suggested that African Americans and Hispanics may rely on clergy as the sole source of mental health care (
16,
17), depressed clients in our sample who received FBO depression services were more likely than others to report use of psychiatric medications, for example. Some research has shown that persons from racial-ethnic minority populations end mental health treatment prematurely, including medications, and FBO depression services could serve a role in encouraging adherence (
37–
39), an important issue for future research.
Overall, use of FBO depression services was more likely among African Americans, non–U.S.-born Hispanics, younger adults, persons with a lifetime diagnosis of mania or current depression, those taking psychiatric medications, and those who had received depression care or other mental health care from a substance abuse or primary care program or who went to an emergency room for an alcohol, drug, or mental health problem. These are important factors to consider for future community interventions that address unmet mental health needs in urban underresourced communities. Disparities in mental health care for racial-ethnic minority groups (
40) underscore the potential role that FBO depression services might play in addressing barriers to mental health treatment; such barriers include lack of access, lack of trust, language barriers, and high costs. In addition to providing culturally concordant care, coordination of care between FBOs and traditional mental health services could decrease the current gap between need and treatment.
The study had some limitations. First, FBOs were considered as a single category; however, FBOs represent diverse institutions within communities. Second, all measures were based on self-reports. Third, the study was based in two urban and underresourced communities in Los Angeles. Fourth, African Americans were analyzed as a homogeneous group, and Hispanics were distinguished only by whether they were U.S. born, because of the limited numbers of non–U.S.-born African Americans in this study. Future research should explore similar issues in specific cultural subgroups, various types of FBOs, and geographic areas.