• Am J Manag Care · Nov 2022

    Poor self-rated mental health and Medicare beneficiaries' routine care-seeking.

    • Steven C Martino, Ron D Hays, Katrin Hambarsoomian, Amelia M Haviland, Robert Weech-Maldonado, Joshua Breslau, Nate Orr, Sarah Gaillot, and Marc N Elliott.
    • RAND Corporation, 4570 Fifth Ave, Ste 600, Pittsburgh, PA 15213-2665. Email: martino@rand.org.
    • Am J Manag Care. 2022 Nov 1; 28 (11): e411e416e411-e416.

    ObjectivesTo assess the relationship between self-rated mental health (SRMH) and infrequent routine care among Medicare beneficiaries and to investigate the roles of managed care and having a personal doctor.Study DesignCross-sectional analysis of data from the 2018 Medicare Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey.MethodsLogistic regression was used to predict infrequent routine care (having not made an appointment for routine care in the last 6 months) from SRMH, Medicare coverage type (fee-for-service [FFS] vs Medicare Advantage [MA], the managed care version of Medicare), and the interaction of these variables. Models that did and did not include having a personal doctor were compared. All models controlled for demographics and physical health.ResultsOverall, 14.9% of beneficiaries did not make a routine care appointment in the last 6 months, with rates adjusted for demographics and physical health ranging from 14.5% for those with "excellent" SRMH to 19.2% for those with "poor" SRMH. Beneficiaries with poor SRMH were less likely to make a routine care appointment in FFS than in MA (20.1% vs 16.4%, respectively, had not done so in the last 6 months; P < .05). Accounting for having a personal doctor reduced the association between SRMH and infrequent routine care by about a third.ConclusionsExtra efforts are needed to ensure receipt of routine care by beneficiaries with poor mental health-particularly in FFS, where more should be done to ensure that beneficiaries have a personal doctor.

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