The persistence of child and adolescence mental healthcare: results from registry data

Abstract Background Previous studies on the persistence of child and adolescent mental healthcare do not consider the role of time-invariant individual characteristics. Estimating persistence of healthcare using standard linear models yields biased estimates due to unobserved heterogeneity and the a...

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Main Authors: Hermien H. Dijk, Roel D. Freriks, Rob J.M. Alessie, Jochen O. Mierau
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-12-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-020-05962-4
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author Hermien H. Dijk
Roel D. Freriks
Rob J.M. Alessie
Jochen O. Mierau
author_facet Hermien H. Dijk
Roel D. Freriks
Rob J.M. Alessie
Jochen O. Mierau
author_sort Hermien H. Dijk
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Previous studies on the persistence of child and adolescent mental healthcare do not consider the role of time-invariant individual characteristics. Estimating persistence of healthcare using standard linear models yields biased estimates due to unobserved heterogeneity and the autoregressive structure of the model. This study provides estimates of the persistence of child and adolescent mental healthcare taking these statistical issues into account. Methods We use registry data of more than 80,000 Dutch children and adolescents between 2000 and 2012 from the Psychiatric Case Registry Northern Netherlands (PCR-NN). In order to account for autocorrelation due to the presence of a lagged dependent variable and to distinguish between persistence caused by time-invariant individual characteristics and a direct care effect we use difference GMM-IV estimation. In further analyses we assess the robustness of our results to policy reforms, different definitions of care and diagnosis decomposition. Results All estimation results for the direct care effect (true state-dependence) show a positive coefficient smaller than unity with a main effect of 0.215 (p<0.01), which indicates that the process is stable. Persistence of care is found to be 0.065 (p<0.05) higher for females. Additionally, the majority of persistence of care appears to be associated with time-invariant characteristics. Further analyses indicate that (1) results are robust to different definitions of care and (2) persistence of care does not differ significantly across subgroups. Conclusions The results indicate that the majority of mental healthcare persistence for children and adolescents is due to time-invariant individuals characteristics. Additionally, we find that in the absence of further shocks a sudden increase of 10 care contacts in the present year is associated with an average of less than 3 additional care contacts at some point in the future. This result provides essential information about the necessity of budget increases for future years in the case of exogenous increases in healthcare use.
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spelling doaj.art-04826cfcdfca4ef48fd97a254f4873bf2022-12-21T22:30:38ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632020-12-012011810.1186/s12913-020-05962-4The persistence of child and adolescence mental healthcare: results from registry dataHermien H. Dijk0Roel D. Freriks1Rob J.M. Alessie2Jochen O. Mierau3Department of Economics, Econometrics & Finance, University of GroningenDepartment of Economics, Econometrics & Finance, University of GroningenDepartment of Economics, Econometrics & Finance, University of GroningenDepartment of Economics, Econometrics & Finance, University of GroningenAbstract Background Previous studies on the persistence of child and adolescent mental healthcare do not consider the role of time-invariant individual characteristics. Estimating persistence of healthcare using standard linear models yields biased estimates due to unobserved heterogeneity and the autoregressive structure of the model. This study provides estimates of the persistence of child and adolescent mental healthcare taking these statistical issues into account. Methods We use registry data of more than 80,000 Dutch children and adolescents between 2000 and 2012 from the Psychiatric Case Registry Northern Netherlands (PCR-NN). In order to account for autocorrelation due to the presence of a lagged dependent variable and to distinguish between persistence caused by time-invariant individual characteristics and a direct care effect we use difference GMM-IV estimation. In further analyses we assess the robustness of our results to policy reforms, different definitions of care and diagnosis decomposition. Results All estimation results for the direct care effect (true state-dependence) show a positive coefficient smaller than unity with a main effect of 0.215 (p<0.01), which indicates that the process is stable. Persistence of care is found to be 0.065 (p<0.05) higher for females. Additionally, the majority of persistence of care appears to be associated with time-invariant characteristics. Further analyses indicate that (1) results are robust to different definitions of care and (2) persistence of care does not differ significantly across subgroups. Conclusions The results indicate that the majority of mental healthcare persistence for children and adolescents is due to time-invariant individuals characteristics. Additionally, we find that in the absence of further shocks a sudden increase of 10 care contacts in the present year is associated with an average of less than 3 additional care contacts at some point in the future. This result provides essential information about the necessity of budget increases for future years in the case of exogenous increases in healthcare use.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-020-05962-4PsychiatricHealthcareRegister DataPanel data models
spellingShingle Hermien H. Dijk
Roel D. Freriks
Rob J.M. Alessie
Jochen O. Mierau
The persistence of child and adolescence mental healthcare: results from registry data
BMC Health Services Research
Psychiatric
Healthcare
Register Data
Panel data models
title The persistence of child and adolescence mental healthcare: results from registry data
title_full The persistence of child and adolescence mental healthcare: results from registry data
title_fullStr The persistence of child and adolescence mental healthcare: results from registry data
title_full_unstemmed The persistence of child and adolescence mental healthcare: results from registry data
title_short The persistence of child and adolescence mental healthcare: results from registry data
title_sort persistence of child and adolescence mental healthcare results from registry data
topic Psychiatric
Healthcare
Register Data
Panel data models
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-020-05962-4
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