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      Health Insurance Trends and Access to Behavioral Healthcare Among Justice-Involved Individuals—United States, 2008–2014

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          Abstract

          <div class="section"> <a class="named-anchor" id="d1982566e300"> <!-- named anchor --> </a> <h5 class="section-title" id="d1982566e301">BACKGROUND</h5> <p id="Par1">A large proportion of justice-involved individuals have mental health issues and substance use disorders (SUD) that are often untreated due to high rates of uninsurance. However, roughly half of justice-involved individuals were estimated to be newly eligible for health insurance through the Affordable Care Act (ACA). </p> </div><div class="section"> <a class="named-anchor" id="d1982566e305"> <!-- named anchor --> </a> <h5 class="section-title" id="d1982566e306">OBJECTIVE</h5> <p id="Par2">We aimed to assess health insurance trends among justice-involved individuals before and after implementation of the ACA’s key provisions, the dependent coverage mandate and Medicaid expansion, and to examine the relationship between health insurance and treatment for behavioral health conditions. </p> </div><div class="section"> <a class="named-anchor" id="d1982566e310"> <!-- named anchor --> </a> <h5 class="section-title" id="d1982566e311">DESIGN</h5> <p id="Par3">Repeated and pooled cross-sectional analyses of data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH). </p> </div><div class="section"> <a class="named-anchor" id="d1982566e315"> <!-- named anchor --> </a> <h5 class="section-title" id="d1982566e316">PARTICIPANTS</h5> <p id="Par4">Nationally representative sample of 15,899 adults age 19–64 years between 2008 and 2014 with a history of justice involvement during the prior 12 months. </p> </div><div class="section"> <a class="named-anchor" id="d1982566e320"> <!-- named anchor --> </a> <h5 class="section-title" id="d1982566e321">MAIN MEASURES</h5> <p id="Par5">Uninsurance rates between 2008 and 2014 are reported. Additional outcomes include adjusted treatment rates for depression, serious mental illness, and SUD by insurance status. </p> </div><div class="section"> <a class="named-anchor" id="d1982566e325"> <!-- named anchor --> </a> <h5 class="section-title" id="d1982566e326">KEY RESULTS</h5> <p id="Par6">The dependent coverage mandate was associated with a 13.0 percentage point decline in uninsurance among justice-involved individuals age 19–25 years ( <i>p</i> &lt; 0.001). Following Medicaid expansion, uninsurance declined among justice involved individuals of all ages by 9.7 percentage points ( <i>p</i> &lt; 0.001), but remained 16.3 percentage points higher than uninsurance rates for individuals without justice involvement ( <i>p</i> &lt; 0.001). In pooled analyses, Medicaid, relative to uninsurance and private insurance, was associated with significantly higher treatment rates for illicit drug abuse/dependence and depression. </p> </div><div class="section"> <a class="named-anchor" id="d1982566e339"> <!-- named anchor --> </a> <h5 class="section-title" id="d1982566e340">CONCLUSION</h5> <p id="Par7">Given the high prevalence of mental illness and substance use disorders among justice-involved populations, persistently elevated rates of uninsurance and other barriers to care remain a significant public health concern. Sustained outreach is required to reduce health insurance disparities between individuals with and without justice involvement. Public insurance appears to be associated with higher treatment rates, relative to uninsurance and private insurance, among justice-involved individuals. </p> </div>

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          Understanding Patterns Of High-Cost Health Care Use Across Different Substance User Groups

          Substance use contributes to significant societal burdens, including high-cost health care use. However, these burdens may vary by type of substance and level of involvement. Using the 2009-13 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health, we examined all-cause hospitalizations and estimated costs across substance use profiles for alcohol, marijuana, and other illicit drugs. For each substance, we characterized differences between abstainers, nondiagnostic users (people who used the substance but did not meet diagnostic criteria for substance use disorder), and people with substance use disorders. In a multivariate analysis, we found that the odds of hospitalization were 16 percent lower for nondiagnostic marijuana users and 11 percent lower for nondiagnostic alcohol users, compared to abstainers. Neither alcohol- nor marijuana-specific substance use disorders were associated with hospitalization. In contrast, substance use disorders for other illicit drugs were strongly associated with hospitalization: People with those disorders had 2.2 times higher odds of hospitalization relative to abstainers. A more detailed understanding of health care use in different substance user groups could inform the ongoing expansion of substance use services in the United States.
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            Seizing opportunities under the Affordable Care Act for transforming the mental and behavioral health system.

            The Affordable Care Act, along with Medicaid expansions, offers the opportunity to redesign the nation's highly flawed mental health system. It promotes new programs and tools, such as health homes, interdisciplinary care teams, the broadening of the Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services option, co-location of physical health and behavioral services, and collaborative care. Provisions of the act offer extraordinary opportunities, for instance, to insure many more people, reimburse previously unreimbursed services, integrate care using new information technology tools and treatment teams, confront complex chronic comorbidities, and adopt underused evidence-based interventions. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and its Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation should work intensively with the states to implement these new programs and other arrangements and begin to fulfill the many unmet promises of community mental health care.
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              Increased hospital and emergency department utilization by individuals with recent criminal justice involvement: results of a national survey.

              Individuals involved with the criminal justice system have increased health needs and poor access to primary care.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of General Internal Medicine
                J GEN INTERN MED
                Springer Nature
                0884-8734
                1525-1497
                December 2016
                September 16 2016
                : 31
                : 12
                : 1523-1529
                Article
                10.1007/s11606-016-3845-5
                5130958
                27638837
                41443a1f-c673-4d2c-90b7-c7e25bb413ae
                © 2016

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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