非洲裔和阿拉伯裔美国青年获得心理健康服务的种族和民族差异:一项审计研究

Kalani Gates, A. Damashek, Kailyn Alderman, B. Babcock, Brendan Skinner
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引用次数: 4

摘要

有色人种在获得心理健康服务的质量和途径上存在种族差异。提供者偏见已被发现使非裔美国成年人无法获得服务。然而,尚不清楚提供者偏见是否会影响非洲裔和阿拉伯裔美国青年获得服务的机会。此外,人们对客户性别和社区变量(如城市化程度(即城市与非城市)在青年获得护理方面的作用知之甚少。审计方法检查了在密歇根州的城市和非城市地区,客户的种族/民族和性别是否预测了提供者对求助信息的反应。配音演员们制作了一段录音,描绘了一位白人、非裔美国人或阿拉伯裔美国人的母亲为她的青少年预约治疗。在底特律地铁和密歇根州西南部,服务提供商的语音信箱中留下了录音。收集了有关提供商是否:(i)回调和(ii)发起或拒绝服务的数据。客户端特征对提供商回电几率的影响因位置而异。在非城市地区,白人客户获得回调的几率是非裔和阿拉伯裔美国人客户的3.4-3.8倍。此外,在城市地区,女性客户收到回调的几率是男性客户的2倍。本研究的结果表明,提供者偏见限制了非城市地区非洲裔和阿拉伯裔美国青少年获得精神卫生服务的机会,这突出表明需要制定策略来解决有色人种青少年获得精神卫生服务的差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Access to Mental Health Services for African and Arab American Youth: An Audit Study
ABSTRACT Racial disparities exist in the quality of and access to mental health services for people of color. Provider bias has been found to avert African American adults from accessing services. However, it is unknown whether provider bias affects service access for African and Arab American youth. Moreover, little is known about the role of client gender and community variables such as urbanicity (i.e., urban versus non-urban) in access to care for youth. Audit methodology examined whether client race/ethnicity and gender predicted providers’ responses to help-seeking messages in an urban and non-urban area of Michigan. Voice actresses created audio recordings portraying a White, African American, or Arab American mother requesting a therapy appointment for her adolescent. Recordings were left on providers’ voicemails in Metro Detroit and Southwest Michigan. Data were collected on whether the providers: (i) called back, and (ii) initiated or denied services. The effect of client characteristics on the odds of a provider calling back differed by location. In the non-urban location, White clients had a 3.4–3.8 times greater odds of receiving a callback than the African and Arab American clients. Additionally, in the urban location, female clients had a 2 times greater odds of receiving a callback than the male clients. Findings from this study suggest that provider bias limited access to mental health services for African and Arab American adolescents in the non-urban location, highlighting the need for strategies to address disparities in access to mental health services for youth of color.
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