Understanding Treatment Dropout in Outpatient Mental Health Services: An Economic Framework Exploring the Relationship between Patient Satisfaction and Appointment

Abstract

Noncompliance in the form of treatment dropouts is a major problem across outpatient mental health settings and can range from 40-50% of all clients. Economic theory suggests that noncompliance is consumer signaling about patient preferences. The mental health industry standard for evaluating patient preferences is the patient satisfaction measure. This study examined the relationship between treatment noncompliance and patient satisfaction. After controlling for sociodemographic and health status factors, it was hypothesized that patient satisfaction would predict duration of mental health treatment. Using 1996-1999 data from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Medical Expenditure Panel, a satisfaction measure was constructed and regression models developed to examine the impact of satisfaction on treatment duration for patients having at least one mental health visit. Survival analysis was used to examine the hazard rate of patients having high versus low satisfaction. The findings suggest that individuals satisfied with and having confidence in the provider were significantly more likely to have a subsequent visit. The importance of satisfaction in predicting treatment continuation was not constant with respect to the number of visits or patient sociodemographic characteristics. Satisfaction was strongly predictive of continuation for the college educated and individuals with a mental health diagnosis, but less important for African Americans, the high-school educated, and individuals ages 25-44. Practical aspects of care such as access were significantly more important for Hispanics and the publicly insured. Evidence suggests there is a distinct group of consumers who seek and are satisfied with consultation only. MEPS measures satisfaction with "usual source of care," but it lacks specificity and does not reflect satisfaction with mental health care. The role of treatment preferences needs to be investigated further. 37 tables, 22 figures, 156 re7

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Nov 14, 2003
Accession Number
ADA418321

Entities

People

  • Rhonda G. Ozanian

Organizations

  • Columbia University

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Antidepressants
  • Anxiety Disorders
  • Databases
  • Depression
  • Drug Therapy
  • Ethnic Groups
  • Factor Analysis
  • Health Care
  • Health Services
  • Information Science
  • Medical Personnel
  • Psychiatry
  • Psychology
  • Recreation
  • Surveys
  • Therapy
  • Traumatic Stress Disorder

Fields of Study

  • Medicine

Readers

  • Medical or Health Care Field.
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