Go to content

How much do mental health and substance use/addiction affect use of general medical services? Extent of use, reason for use, and associated costs

Share

Objective — To measure service use and costs associated with healthcare for patients with mental health (MH) and substance use/addiction (SA) problems.

Methods — A 5-year cross-sectional study (2007-2012) of administrative healthcare data was conducted (average annual sample size = 123,235 adults aged >18 years who had a valid Ontario healthcare number and used at least 1 service during the year; 55% female). We assessed average annual use of primary care, emergency departments and hospitals, and overall healthcare costs for patients identified as having MH only, SA only, co-occurring MH and SA problems (MH+SA), and no MH and/or SA (MH/SA) problems. Total visits/admissions and total non-MH/SA visits (i.e., excluding MH/SA visits) were regressed separately on MH, SA, and MH+SA cases compared to non-MH/SA cases using the 2011-2012 sample (N = 123,331), controlling for age and sex.

Results — Compared to non-MH/SA patients, MH/SA patients were significantly (P < 0.001) more likely to visit primary care physicians (1.82 times as many visits for MH-only patients, 4.24 for SA, and 5.59 for MH+SA), use emergency departments (odds, 1.53 [MH], 3.79 [SA], 5.94 [MH+SA]), and be hospitalized (odds, 1.59 [MH], 4.10 [SA], 7.82 [MH+SA]). MH/SA patients were also significantly more likely than non-MH/SA patients to have non-MH/SA-related visits and accounted for 20% of the sample but over 30% of healthcare costs.

Conclusions — MH and SA are core issues for all healthcare settings. MH/SA patients use more services overall and for non-MH/SA issues, with especially high use and costs for MH+SA patients.

Information

Citation

Graham K, Cheng J, Bernards S, Wells S, Rehm J, Kurdyak P. Can J Psychiatry. 2017; 62(1):48-56. Epub 2016 Aug 20.

View Source

Contributing ICES Scientists

Associated Sites