| Literature DB >> 25578511 |
Kimberly Eaton Hoagwood1, Susan Essock2, Joseph Morrissey3, Anne Libby4, Sheila Donahue5, Benjamin Druss6, Molly Finnerty5,7, Linda Frisman8, Meera Narasimhan9, Bradley D Stein10,11, Jennifer Wisdom12, Judy Zerzan13.
Abstract
State systems are a rich, albeit challenging, laboratory for policy-relevant services research studies. State mental health authorities routinely devote resources to collect data for state planning and reporting purposes. However, these data are rarely used in cross-state comparisons to inform state or federal policy development. In 2008, in response to key recommendations from the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Advisory Council's "The Road Ahead: Research Partnership to Transform Services," (http://www.nimh.nih.gov/about/advisory-boards-and-groups/namhc/reports/road-ahead.pdf), NIMH issued a request for applications (RFA) to support studies on the impact of state policy changes on access, cost, quality and outcomes of care for individuals with mental disorders. The purpose of the RFA was to bridge the divide between research and policy by encouraging research that used state administrative data across states, and to address significant state-defined health policy initiatives. Five projects involving eight states were selected through peer review for funding. Projects began in 2009 and were funded for 3 years. This report provides a brief description of the five projects, followed by an analysis of the impact, challenges, and lessons learned from these policy-partnered studies. We conclude by offering suggestions on ways to use state administrative data for informing state health policies, which is especially timely given national and state changes in the structure and financing of healthcare.Entities:
Keywords: Mental health; Policy; States; Systems
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 25578511 PMCID: PMC4500680 DOI: 10.1007/s10488-014-0620-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adm Policy Ment Health ISSN: 0894-587X
Summary of NIMH R01 grants funded under RFA-MH-09-050 “Use of Pooled State Administrative Data for Policy Relevant Mental Health Services Research”
| Pooled states | Principal investigators | Grant title | Research aims | Datasets | Outcome indicators | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CO-OR | Zerzan and Libby | Sedative hypnotic use by the mentally ill: A Medicaid prescription policy study | Develop a pooled, multi-state Medicaid dataset to study changes in health service utilization associated with policy implementation of sedative hypnotic access restriction policy types (preferred drug lists, prior authorization and cost sharing) in CO and OR | Medicaid | Prescriptions of psychotropics, second generation antipsychotic (SGA) Prescription drug, service utilization, and expenditure Speed and duration of policy impact on sedative hypnotic and SGAprescription fills | Quetiapine was the most frequent SGA in both states (40 % new starts), and for low-dose SGA new starts (55 % CO, 63 % OR). Females had an increased likelihood, and people diagnosed with schizophrenia or anxiety had a decreased likelihood of low-dose quetiapine initiation. Initiation of low-dose quetiapine as a proportion of all SGA initiation and or of quetiapine starts significantly decreased after off-label promotion ended in one state (OR). Cost sharing and Preferred Drug Lists were associated with decreased utilization, but quantity limits were not associated with significant change in prescription rates in both states |
| CT-WA | Morrissey and Frisman | Community reentry of persons with severe mental illness released from state prison | Assess the impact of expedited Medicaid benefits restoration policies on service utilization and costs among persons with severe mental illness | Medicaid | Mental health service (inpatient and outpatient) use Substance use Arrest and incarceration Cost | Inmates with severe mental illness who received expedited Medicaid benefits were more likely to access mental health services and have shorter time without insurance coverage; no significant effects in criminal justice outcomes and costs |
| GA-SC | Narasimhan and Druss | Clinical and policy implications of a statewide emergency telepsychiatry program | Evaluate the impact of a statewide telepsychiatry intervention in emergency departments on service utilization and costs | Medicaid All-payor, health data warehouse | Inpatient admission Outpatient follow-up Total cost | Intervention state had low rates of inpatient admission, lower costs, and higher rates of outpatient follow-up than a matched control state |
| NY-PA | Essock, Donahue and Stein | Evaluating the impact of clinical alerts generated from Medicaid claims data | Using Medicaid claims data to generate clinical flags predicting short-term risk of continued psychiatric hospitalizations | Medicaid | Psychiatric hospitalization Outpatient service use Psychotropic prescription Cost of service | Multiple recent hospitalizations significantly predicted high short-term risk of continued frequent hospitalizations, but absence of recent medication fills and absence of recent outpatient services did not |
| NY-PA | Wisdom, Hoagwood, Finnerty and Stein | Quality improvement implementation in child mental health: A 2-state comparison | Evaluate the impact of a statewide continuous quality improvement initiative for psychotropic polypharmacy and the effects of prior authorization policies on antipsychotics psychotropic prescription among children and adolescents | Medicaid Area Resource File | Psychotropic polypharmacy Antipsychotics prescription | Polypharmacy patterns were associated with bipolar disorder, older age, specialty mental health services; polypharmacy decreased following clinic participation in the continuous quality improvement initiative; prior authorization policies had a modest but statistically significant effect on decreased antipsychotic use in children aged 6–12 |
Who benefits from use of state administrative data in Policy/Program/Population Health Research?
| Federal Research Institutes | States | Researchers |
|---|---|---|
| This research… | This research… | This research… |
| Responds to states and their identified policy issues | Identifies what works for resource allocation decisions | Advances policy/program/population-level comparative effectiveness research |
| Assesses whether studies using state administrative data can meet peer-review standards | Demonstrates how multiagency administrative data can be organized and analyzed to answer policy/program/population health questions and helps advance state efforts to become learning healthcare organizations | Illustrates how to design, measure and analyze administrative data for policy/program/population health issues |
| Stimulates cross-state comparisons to advance knowledge about service system design and performance | Fosters academic-state agency collaborations for policy/program/population assessments and gives states access to national experts focused on state priorities | Makes research grant proposals more fundable by using administrative data in lieu of costly prospective data collection |
| Provides opportunities to support research on delivery system innovations under the Affordable Care Act | Promotes continuous quality improvement to align state and local service providers | Facilitates academic researchers’ understanding of what topics have high policy significance to states, and how to work with state officials to carry out such research |
| Advances NIMH Strategic Plan | Identifies priority areas for strategic policy development and management via creation of evidence-informed policies | Affords researchers the opportunity to have their work impact public mental health services |