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Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Pediatric Mental Health-Related Emergency Department Visits

Anna H. Abrams, Gia M. Badolato, Meleah D. Boyle, Robert McCarter, Monika K. Goyal

2020Pediatric Emergency Care45 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To test the hypotheses that (1) rates of mental health-related concerns presenting to pediatric emergency departments (ED) have increased (2) rates are increasing more in minority than nonminority youth. METHODS: We performed a 5-year retrospective cohort study of youth with mental health-related ED visits using the Pediatric Health Information System. We calculated rates of mental health-related visits, in aggregate and by race/ethnicity. The Poisson model was used to generate incidence rate ratios of unique mental health-related visits each year using census data as the population denominator. RESULTS: There were 242,036 mental health-related visits that met the inclusion criteria, representing 160,656 unique patients. Approximately 7% of unique patients had 3 or more mental health-related visits, differing by race/ethnicity (8.75% non-Hispanic [NH]-Black vs 7.01% NH-White; adjusted odds ratio 1.14 [1.03, 1.26]). Overall, there were 42.8 mental health-related ED visits per 100,000 US children. The NH-Black children had higher rates of visits per 100,000 children compared with NH-Whites (66.1 vs 41.5; adjusted relative risk, 1.54 [1.50-1.59]). Mental health-related visits increased from 2012 to 2016 (33.31 [32.92-33.70] to 49.94 [49.46-50.41]). Every racial/ethnic group experienced an increase in rate of presentation over the study period; Hispanics experienced a significantly larger increase compared with NH-White children (P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Mental health-related ED visits among children are increasing overall, disproportionally affecting minority children. The NH-Black children have the highest visit rates, and rates among Hispanics are increasing at a significantly higher rate when compared with NH-Whites. These results indicate need for increased capacity of EDs to manage mental health-related complaints, especially among minority populations.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineEmergency departmentEthnic groupMental healthFamily medicineEmergency medicineMedical emergencyEl NiñoSuicide preventionMEDLINEInjury preventionEthnic originHuman factors and ergonomicsPoison controlIntensive careGerontologyOccupational safety and healthEmergency and Acute Care StudiesChild and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional DevelopmentChild and Adolescent Health
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