학술논문

Preferences of parents for mental health services to suit children with chronic medical conditions.
Document Type
Article
Source
Australian Health Review. 2022, Vol. 46 Issue 6, p722-730. 9p.
Subject
*CHRONIC disease treatment
*PARENT attitudes
*PSYCHOLOGY of parents
*CHILDREN'S hospitals
*MEDICAL care
*SURVEYS
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*RESEARCH funding
*SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics)
*MENTAL health services
*OUTPATIENT services in hospitals
*CHILDREN
Language
ISSN
0156-5788
Abstract
Objectives: To identify features of mental health services that affect the uptake of services among parents of children with chronic medical conditions, to inform the design of pathways into mental health care. Methods: A discrete choice experiment in which participants made choices between hypothetical mental health services described in terms of service features: cost, wait time, provider knowledge of chronic medical conditions, recommendations, opening hours, and travel time. Participants were parents of children attending The Royal Children's Hospital outpatient clinics for the management of a chronic medical condition who completed the online survey between August 2020 and January 2021. The uptake of mental health services with differing features was predicted based on regression models examining the relationship between choice and service features, and accounting for participant characteristics and unobserved heterogeneity. Results: The sample comprised 112 parents, of whom 52% reported unmet needs. The most influential service features were wait times, cost, recommendation from medical specialists, and mental health provider knowledge of chronic medical conditions. Predicted uptake of a realistic service showed inequalities across income, parental education, and single parent status. A service comprising preferred features was predicted to eliminate these inequalities. Conclusions: Reducing cost and wait time for mental health services could reduce unmet need among children with chronic medical conditions. Specific approaches to tackle the high levels of unmet needs in this group include equipping medical specialists to recommend mental health providers and training mental health providers on the impacts of chronic medical conditions on children. Offering preferred services could increase uptake and reduce inequalities in mental health care. What is known about the topic? Children with chronic medical conditions have high rates of unmet need for mental healthcare. Qualitative research has indicated features of mental health services that may be important to consider in service design to address these unmet needs. What does this paper add? A detailed understanding of parents' preferences for features of mental health services for children with chronic medical conditions, including their importance and prediction of uptake under different scenarios. What are the implications for practitioners? Parents preferred services with recommendation from specialists, mental health providers who understand the impact of chronic conditions, lower cost, and shorter wait time. Offering preferred mental health services is predicted to significantly reduce unmet needs and reduce inequalities in care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]