| December 15, 2008 | Media contact: Jessica Soulliere E-mail: jessoul@umich.edu Phone: 734-764-2220 |
Kids' mental health concerns meet barriers in primary, specialty care
C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital National Poll on Children’s Health finds 56% of primary care physicians never ask parents about mental health concerns for their kids; 25% of kids with diagnoses have difficulty finding services they need
ANN ARBOR, Mich.—Middle childhood and adolescence are stages in a child’s development fraught with physical, mental and emotional changes. These are particularly difficult periods for many parents who may look to their child’s primary care physician for guidance and assistance with getting treatment if needed.
- 1 in 4 parents have used specialty mental health services for their children and most of these parents (15 percent overall) have done so in the past year.
- Overall, 7 percent of parents say there has been a time when they could not get the specialty mental health services they wanted for their child.
- For parents who say they’ve had difficulty getting specialty mental health services for their child, 46 percent of parents cite difficulty finding a provider as the reason; 43 percent of parents say services cost too much; 35 percent say they could not get a timely appointment, and 33 percent say they did not know where to go.
- When asked about insurance coverage, 45 percent of parents report having full coverage for mental health services; 20 percent have limited coverage; 8 percent have no coverage; and 27 percent say they are unsure about whether or not they had coverage.
“We know from other studies that mental health services are in short supply nationally, so even though parents may be referred for specialty mental health services, they may have trouble getting in for a variety of reasons,” Davis says. “Those reasons can range from lack of comprehensive coverage for mental health services in their health insurance plans to lack of knowledge among PCPs about services available in their communities.”
Davis says that legislators can help parents by voting for mental health parity laws when being considered at both the state and federal level. Legislators could also vote for new laws that would encourage training of mental health services providers by giving new loan forgiveness programs in social work, psychology or psychiatry programs or encourage PCPs to get additional training by offsetting the cost of that training for the providers themselves.
Other resources:
- National Conference of State legislatures Children’s Policy Initiative: Mental Health Services for Children
- For the complete report and podcast about poll results, visit the C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital National Poll on Children’s Health online.
Methodology: For its report, the National Poll on Children’s Health used data from a national online survey conducted in August 2008 in collaboration with Knowledge Networks, Inc. The survey was administered to a random sample of 2,245 adults, ages 18 and older, who are a part of Knowledge Network’s online KnowledgePanel® For this analysis, a subset of parents with children age 5-17 years was used (n=1,473). The sample was subsequently weighted to reflect U.S. population figures from the U.S. Census Bureau. About three-fourths of the sample included households with children. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 2 to 11 percentage points, depending on the question.
Purpose/Funding: The C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital National Poll on Children’s Health – funded by the Department of Pediatrics and Communicable Diseases and part of the CHEAR Unit at the U-M Health System – is designed to measure major health care issues and trends for U.S. children.
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56% of primary care physicians never ask parents about mental health concerns for their kids

