| Literature DB >> 31870372 |
Graham J Reid1,2, Shannon L Stewart3,4, Melanie Barwick5,6,7, Jeffrey Carter8,9, Alan Leschied4, Richard W J Neufeld10, Jeff St Pierre9,11, Juliana I Tobon12,13, Evelyn Vingilis14, Gregory S Zaric15,16.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Some children with mental health (MH) problems have been found to receive ongoing care, either continuously or episodically. We sought to replicate patterns of MH service use over extended time periods, and test predictors of these patterns.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Mental health; Mental health services; Patterns of service use
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31870372 PMCID: PMC6929287 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-4842-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Patterns of service use based on five child and youth mental health service agencies across 4 years. The y-axis shows the probability of a child having at least one visit in each month. The x-axis shows months, starting with month 1 (the child’s first visit at the agency) through to the end of the observation period (4 years after the child’s first visit). For example, at month 11 a child in the Ongoing/Intensive-Episodic class had a 0.63 probability of a visit; in other words, 63% of this group of children were seen in month 11. At month 21, a child in the Intensive group had a 0.22 probability of being seen, whereas a child in the Brief Episodic group had only a 0.08 probability of being seen. Classes were labelled based on examination of the probability of visits over time and descriptive statistics on the overall duration of involvement and number of visits, along with the number and distribution of episodes of care (see Table 1 and Additional file 1)
Service Use and Demographic Characteristics by Pattern of Service Use
| Pattern | N | Total | Sex1 | Age2 | Number of episodes | Duration of involvement (years) | Duration of involvement > 2 years | Visits over 4 years | Volume of all services3 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 0 | 1 | 2+ | ||||||||
| % | % | M (SD) | (%) | (%) | (%) | M (SD) | % | M (SD) | % | ||
| Minimal | 2997 | 53 | 61.5 | 10.1 (2.6)A | 60.9 | 37.3 | 1.8 | 0.4 (0.8) | 6.3 | 3.1 (2.9) | 9.8 |
| Acute | 1131 | 20 | 60.9 | 9.9 (2.5) AB | *** | 95.6 | 4.2 | 0.8 (0.7) | 8.2 | 15.6 (17.4) | 18.5 |
| Brief Episodic | 447 | 8 | 62.2 | 9.3 (2.5) C | *** | 27.3 | 72.0 | 3.5 (0.5) | 99.8 | 28.6 (28.0) | 14.2 |
| Intensive | 730 | 13 | 67.8 | 9.7 (2.5) B | – | 73.4 | 26.6 | 1.8 (0.8) | 31.1 | 32.6 (28.6) | 25.9 |
| Ongoing/ Intensive-Episodic | 327 | 6 | 61.2 | 9.9 (2.4) AB | – | 54.4 | 45.5 | 3.3 (0.6) | 100.0 | 86.7 (105.8) | 31.6 |
| Total Sample | 5632 | 100 | 62.3 | 9.9 (2.6) | 32.5 | 53.9 | 13.7 | 1.1 (1.3) | 22.8 | 16.3 (36.1) | 100.0 |
Note. *** reflects < 5 children within the category; data not reported. --- reflects no cases in a cell
1Sex differed across patterns [χ2 (4) = 11.279, p = .024]. The Intensive pattern had proportionally more boys than expected [Adjusted residual χ2(1) = 11.022, p < .001]
2Age at intake differed across patterns [F (4, 5627) = 11.8, p < .0001]. Means followed by a common superscript letter are not significantly different at p < 0.05 (Bonferroni post-hoc test)
3Volume of all services: Visits were summed across all clients and all agencies within each of the five patterns, and divided by the sum of all visits for all clients and agencies
Predictors of Pattern of Service Use, Standardized Canonical Discriminant Function Coefficients and Structure Coefficients
| Function 1 | Function 2 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Family Burden, Externalizing, Impairment | Age, Internalizing | |||
| Predictor | Standardizeda | Structureb | Standardizeda | Structureb |
| Sex | 0.131 | 0.045 | −0.031 | −0.154 |
| Age | −0.373 | − 0.356 | 0.869 | 0.886 |
| BCFPI Externalizing | 0.377 | 0.791 | 0.007 | 0.239 |
| BCFPI Internalizing | 0.007 | 0.349 | 0.317 | 0.417 |
| BCFPI Child Impairment | 0.315 | 0.700 | 0.118 | 0.426 |
| BCFPI Family Burden | 0.416 | 0.816 | 0.137 | 0.296 |
Note. BCFPI Brief Child and Family Phone Interview
aCoefficients with larger absolute values reflect variables with greater discriminating ability
bPooled within-groups correlations between predictor variables and standardized canonical discriminant function coefficients shown
Fig. 2Patterns of service use group centroids on two functions based on discriminant function analysis. The standardized discriminant function coefficients and structure coefficients are reported in Table 2. Scores above zero on Function 1 reflect higher levels of externalizing, impairment (i.e., greater impairment), and family burden. Scores greater than zero on Function 2 reflect older age and higher internalizing scores. Tables 1 and 3 present descriptive statistics for age and the Brief Child and Family Phone Interview (BCFPI) variables by class
Clinical Characteristics of Sample for Patterns of Service Use across the Five Child and Youth Mental Health Service Agencies
| Clinical characteristics | Minimal | Acute | Brief Episodic | Intensive | Ongoing/Intensive-Episodic | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n (%) or | n (%) or | n (%) or | n (%) or | n (%) or | n (%) or | |
| Cases with BCFPI1 at intake (row %) | 1719 (51.4%) | 695 (20.8%) | 257 (7.7%) | 476 (14.2%) | 198 (5.9%) | 3344 (59.4%) |
| BCPFI at Intake2 | ||||||
| Externalizing M (SD) | 65.5 (13.3)A | 69.4 (12.9)B | 69.6 (12.0)BC | 70.9 (13.1)BD | 72.5 (13.0)CD | 67.8 (13.3) |
| Internalizing M (SD) | 62.0 (14.0)A | 63.8 (14.4)AB | 63.0 (14.3)AC | 64.5 (14.4)BCD | 66.2 (15.3)BCD | 63.0 (14.3) |
| Child Impairment M(SD) | 63.4 (13.8)A | 66.8 (13.9)B | 66.6 (14.8)BC | 68.6 (15.2)BCD | 71.0 (15.2)D | 65.6 (14.4) |
| Family Burden M (SD) | 70.7 (19.3)A | 76.7 (21.5)B | 77.0 (20.6)BC | 79.2 (21.6)BCD | 81.5 (23.3)BCD | 74.4 (20.8) |
| Externalizing T ≥ 653 | 881 (51.3%) | 434 (62.5%) | 167 (65.0%) | 323 (67.9%) | 138 (69.7%) | 1943 (58.1%) |
| Internalizing T ≥ 653 | 632 (36.8%) | 280 (40.3%) | 99 (38.5%) | 209 (43.9%) | 95 (48.0%) | 1315 (39.3%) |
| Child Impairment T ≥ 653 | 758 (44.1%) | 373 (53.7%) | 143 (55.6%) | 267 (56.1%) | 126 (63.6%) | 1667 (49.9%) |
| Family Burden T ≥ 653 | 825 (48.0%) | 429 (61.8%) | 164 (63.8%) | 313 (65.8%) | 134 (67.7%) | 1865 (55.8%) |
| Comorbidity at Intake | ||||||
| Sub-clinical levels (i.e., T < 65%) | 624 (36.3%) | 178 (25.6%) | 65 (25.3%) | 97 (20.4%) | 37 (18.7%) | 1001 (29.9%) |
| Externalizing or Internalizing T ≥ 653 | 659 (38.3%) | 313 (45.1%) | 112 (43.6%) | 224 (47.1%) | 89 (44.9%) | 1397 (41.8%) |
| Externalizing and Internalizing T ≥ 653 | 425 (24.7%) | 200 (28.8%) | 76 (29.6%) | 154 (32.4%) | 72 (36.4%) | 927 (27.7%) |
Note. % = Column percentages are reported, except as noted for cases with BCFPI
1BCFPI Brief Child and Family Phone Interview
2For each row variable, means followed by a common superscript letter are not significantly different at p < 0.05 (Bonferroni post-hoc test). Frequencies are a percentage of subsample with BCFPI present
3T-scores computed from age- and sex-based population norms
Fig. 3Average Brief Child and Family Phone Interview (BCFPI) composite scale scores by service use pattern