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Use of health and mental health services by adolescents across multiple delivery sites

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Abstract

Purpose

To assess the role that school-based health centers (SBHCs) play in facilitating access to care among low-income adolescents and the extent to which SBHCs and a community health center network (CHN) provide similar or complementary care.

Methods

A retrospective cohort design was used to compare health care service use among adolescents relying on SBHCs compared with adolescents relying on a CHN. The study sample consisted of 451 inner-city high school students who made 3469 visits between 1989 and 1993. Encounter data were abstracted from medical records. Frequency of use and reason for use are examined according to various sociodemographic and health insurance characteristics.

Results

SBHC users averaged 5.3 visits per year. Minority youth who used the SBHC had the highest visit rates (Hispanic, 6.6 visits/year; African-American, 10.6 visits/year). Visits to SBHCs were primarily for medical (66%, p < .001) and mental health services (34%, p < .001). Visits at CHN sites were 97% medical (p < .001). Visits by adolescents were 1.6 times more likely to be initiated for health maintenance reasons (p = .002; confidence interval [CI], 1.17–2.06) and 21 times more likely to be initiated for mental health reasons (p = < .001; CI, 14.76–28.86) at SBHCs than at CHN facilities. Urgent and emergent care use in the CHN system was four times more likely for adolescents who never used a SBHC (p < .001; CI, 3.44–5.47).

Conclusions

This study supports the view that SBHCs provide complementary services. It also shows their unique role in improving utilization of mental health services by hard-to-reach populations. The extent to which community health centers and other health care providers, including managed care organizations, can build on the unique contributions of SBHCS may positively influence access and quality of care for adolescents in the future.

Section snippets

Methods

A retrospective cohort design matching for age, gender, and socioeconomic status was used to compare service use and results of receiving medical and mental health services for adolescents registered at a community-wide network of health centers with access to a SBHC compared with adolescents registered at the same network without access to a SBHC. The data set began with 912 students who visited health care providers in SBHCs or other community health network (CHN) facilities from June 1989 to

Population characteristics

Table 1 presents gender, race, and insurance status information for adolescents in the sample by group and year. Of the 451 students, 270 or 60% of students used services in Year 1, 281 (62%) in Year 2, and 281 (62%) in Year 3. We found a significant (p < .05) difference in gender in the groups in Year 2 that may represent a random fluctuation in the data. Significant differences were also observed in all years in the distribution of insurance status (Medicaid vs. self-pay) and may reflect

Discussion

The purpose of this study was to compare users and utilization of health services in a SBHC to other delivery sites, specifically a public community health center network. This study adds to the limited body of knowledge about SBHCs as they compare with other service delivery sites for adolescents. Few studies have compared utilization patterns of adolescents using school-based health services to adolescents using other health service delivery sites in the same community. Kaplan and colleagues

Acknowledgements

This work was partially supported by an award from the National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Nursing Research, Fellowship Award F31NR07171 for doctoral study at the Yale School of Nursing. We thank Ms. Marilyn Langello, Margaret Grey, DrPh, Sally Cohen, PhD, and Julie Sochalski, PhD, for their assistance and advice in the preparation of this paper.

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