Publication | Closed Access
Utilization of Health and Mental Health Services by Los Angeles Mexican Americans and Non-Hispanic Whites
291
Citations
20
References
1987
Year
Health Care DisparityMental Health InterventionSocial Determinants Of HealthMental HealthPrimary CareLatino CultureMental Health VisitNon-hispanic WhitesPublic HealthMental Health CounselingHealth Services ResearchLos AngelesMental Health ServicesPsychiatryHealth PolicyHealth EquityMental Health SpecialistMexican American StudiesMental Health MonitoringCommunity Mental HealthBehavioral HealthMedicineHealth Disparity
The study compared general medical and mental‑health service use in Los Angeles ECA respondents with three other ECA sites and examined Mexican‑American versus non‑Hispanic white patterns within Los Angeles. Los Angeles respondents had lower rates of ambulatory visits and hospitalizations than other ECA sites, and Mexican Americans were less likely than non‑Hispanic whites to seek ambulatory care or mental‑health visits, though when they did visit, they were as likely to see a specialist.
Utilization of general medical and mental health services by respondents in the Los Angeles Epidemiologic Catchment Area (ECA) site was compared with that in three ECA sites studied previously (New Haven, Conn, Baltimore, and St Louis). Within the Los Angeles sample, Mexican-American patterns of utilization were compared with those for non-Hispanic whites. Los Angeles respondents were less likely than those at other ECA sites to make ambulatory health care visits and to be hospitalized for physical or mental health reasons. Mexican Americans were less likely than non-Hispanic whites to report ambulatory health care but were as likely to have been hospitalized. Six percent of Los Angeles respondents reported a recent mental-health-care visit as compared with 6% to 7% of respondents at the other ECA sites. However, among respondents with Diagnostic Interview Schedule DSM-III disorders diagnosed within the six months prior to the interview, a lower proportion made a mental health visit in Los Angeles (14%) compared with the other sites (16% to 20%). Of those who made a mental-health-care visit, Los Angeles respondents with a recently diagnosed disorder were more likely than comparable respondents at the other ECA sites to visit a mental health specialist rather than a general medical care provider. Mexican Americans with a recently diagnosed mental disorder were only half as likely as non-Hispanic whites (11% vs 22%, respectively) to have made a mental health visit. However, when Mexican Americans with Diagnostic Interview Schedule/DSM-III did make a mental health visit, they were as likely as non-Hispanic whites to see a mental health specialist.
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