Remoteness and socioeconomic status reduce access to specialist mental health care across Australia

被引:5
|
作者
Amos, Andrew [1 ,5 ]
Coleman, Mathew [2 ]
Walsh, Breeanna Spring [3 ]
Gardiner, Fergus W. [4 ]
机构
[1] James Cook Univ, Coll Med & Dent, Div Trop Hlth & Med, Townsville, Qld, Australia
[2] Great Southern Mental Hlth Serv, Dept Psychiat, Albany, WA, Australia
[3] Royal Flying Doctors Serv, Res & Policy Unit, Townsville, Qld, Australia
[4] Royal Flying Doctors Serv Federat, Res & Policy Unit, Canberra, ACT, Australia
[5] James Cook Univ, Dept Med & Dent, Div Trop Hlth & Med, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia
关键词
rural psychiatry; indigenous psychiatry; health access; SERVICES;
D O I
10.1177/10398562221139129
中图分类号
R749 [精神病学];
学科分类号
100205 ;
摘要
Objective Estimate impact of socioeconomic factors and remoteness from tertiary hospital on incidence/duration of Australian mental health admissions. Methods Retrospective analysis of incidence/duration of public mental health unit admissions (2018-19). Covariates included Indigenous population, potentially preventable hospitalisations (PPH) and socioeconomic disadvantage. Results Regional distance from hospital was correlated with socioeconomic disadvantage (rho: p < 0.01). Population identifying as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander was associated with distance from hospital, socioeconomic disadvantage and PPH (rho: p < 0.01). Bed days per capita was explained (R-adj(2): 0.48) by distance and socioeconomic disadvantage (p < 0.0001). A 1% increase in distance from hospital was associated with a 0.37% decrease in per capita bed days. Admission rate per capita across Queensland and WA was explained (R-adj(2): 0.36) by distance, education/occupation and state (p < 0.05). Across Queensland and WA a 1% increase in distance from hospital was associated with a 0.05% decreased incidence of admission. Conclusions Rural Australians face high mental illness burden, socioeconomic disadvantage and limited service provision. Overcoming the additional disadvantages of reduced likelihood of admission to and reduced time in hospital with increasing distance from hospital will require increased outreach proportional to remoteness.
引用
收藏
页码:19 / 26
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Socioeconomic Disparities in Health Outcomes and Access to Health Care across Three Islands in Comoros
    Kassim, Said Abasse
    Alolga, Raphael Nammahime
    Kassim, Said Mohamed
    Assanhou, Assogba Gabin
    Li Hongchao
    Ma Aixia
    JOURNAL OF HEALTH CARE FOR THE POOR AND UNDERSERVED, 2017, 28 (03) : 1116 - 1140
  • [22] MENTAL HEALTH Access to specialist services is missing
    Sugarman, Philip A.
    BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2012, 344
  • [23] Discrimination in Health Care: A Field Experiment on the Impact of Patients' Socioeconomic Status on Access to Care
    Angerer, Silvia
    Waibel, Christian
    Stummer, Harald
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS, 2019, 5 (04) : 407 - 427
  • [24] Aggression in specialist secure and forensic inpatient mental health care: incidence across care pathways
    Dickens, Geoff
    Picchioni, Marco
    Long, Clive
    JOURNAL OF FORENSIC PRACTICE, 2013, 15 (03) : 206 - 217
  • [25] Improving access to and outcomes from mental health care in rural Australia
    Morley, Belinda
    Pirkis, Jane
    Naccarella, Lucio
    Kohn, Fay
    Blashkil, Grant
    Burgess, Philip
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF RURAL HEALTH, 2007, 15 (05) : 304 - 312
  • [26] Regional variation in cardiovascular mortality in Australia 2009-2012: the impact of remoteness and socioeconomic status
    Jacobs, Jane
    Peterson, Karen Louise
    Allender, Steven
    Alston, Laura Veronica
    Nichols, Melanie
    AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2018, 42 (05) : 467 - 473
  • [27] Development of a National System of Primary and Specialist Mental Health Care for Young People in Australia
    Kilackey, Eoin
    EARLY INTERVENTION IN PSYCHIATRY, 2016, 10 : 207 - 207
  • [28] Unmet Mental Health Care Needs for Children with Special Health Care Needs Stratified by Socioeconomic Status
    Fulda, Kimberly G.
    Lykens, Kristine K.
    Bae, Sejong
    Singh, Karan P.
    CHILD AND ADOLESCENT MENTAL HEALTH, 2009, 14 (04) : 190 - 199
  • [29] What explains differences in waiting times for health care across socioeconomic status?
    Simonsen, Nicolai Fink
    Oxholm, Anne Sophie
    Kristensen, Soren Rud
    Siciliani, Luigi
    HEALTH ECONOMICS, 2020, 29 (12) : 1764 - 1785
  • [30] Specialist mental health services in England in 2014: overview of funding, access and levels of care
    Mary Docherty
    Graham Thornicroft
    International Journal of Mental Health Systems, 9