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NEWS
FROM CAMBRIDGE HEALTH ALLIANCE
January
11, 2007
Harvard Researchers at Cambridge
Health Alliance Find U.S. Latinos are Underutilizing Mental Health
Services
Research Alert
Study Title: Correlates
of Past-Year Mental Health Service Use Among Latinos: Results From
the National Latino and Asian American Study.
Objectives: The authors examined
correlates and rates of past-year mental health service use in a
national sample of Latinos residing in the United States.
Methods: The authors used data
from the National Latino and Asian American Study (www.multiculturalmentalhealth.org/nlaas.asp),
a national epidemiological household survey of Latinos.
Results: Cultural factors such
as nativity, language, age at migration, years of residence in the
United States, and generational status were associated with whether
or not Latinos had used mental health services. However, when the
analysis was stratified according to past-year psychiatric diagnoses,
these associations held only among those who did not fulfill criteria
for any of the psychiatric disorders assessed. Rates of mental health
service use among those who did not fulfill diagnostic criteria
were higher among Puerto Ricans and US-born Latinos than among non-Puerto
Ricans and foreign-born Latinos.
Conclusions: Rates of mental
health service use among Latinos appear to have increased substantially
over the past decade relative to rates reported in the 1990s. Cultural
and immigration characteristics should be considered in matching
mental health services to Latinos who need preventive services or
who are symptomatic but do not fulfill psychiatric disorder criteria.
Authors: Margarita Alegría,
PhD, Director of the Center for Multicultural Mental Health Research
at Cambridge Health Alliance and Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard
Medical School; Norah Mulvaney-Day, PhD, Associate Director of the
Center for Multicultural Mental Health Research at Cambridge Health
Alliance and Instructor in Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School;
Meghan Woo, ScM, Research Assistant at the Center for Multicultural
Mental Health Research at Cambridge Health Alliance and a doctoral
student at the Harvard School of Public Health; Maria Torres, MA,
Project Manager for the National Latino and Asian American Study;
Shan Gao, MS, Data Analyst at the Center for Multicultural Mental
Health Research at Cambridge Health Alliance; and Vanessa Oddo,
BA, Research Assistant at the Center for Multicultural Mental Health
Research at Cambridge Health Alliance.
Journal: American Journal of
Public Health (2007) Vol 97 No. 1: 76-83 Website: www.ajph.org.
Funding: The project was supported
by a National Institute of Health Research Grant funded by the National
Institute of Mental Health as well as the Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration Center for Mental Health Services
and the Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research. This
publication was also made possible by a grant from the National
Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities.
The Center for Multicultural Mental
Health Research, led by Dr. Margarita Alegría, is based
at Cambridge Health Alliance (CHA) and collaborates with outside
institutions such as the Harvard Medical School and the Recinto
de Ciencias Médicas at the University of Puerto Rico (UPR).
The mission is to generate innovative mental health services research
that impacts policy, practice, and service delivery for multicultural
populations. The Center is comprised of an interdisciplinary group
of psychologists, social policy analysts, health economists, psychiatrists,
data analysts, sociologists, and other professionals that assist
in the research and analysis of Center projects. There are currently
three large projects operating at the Center: the National Latino
and Asian American Study (NLAAS); the joint CHA/UPR project Excellence
in Partnerships for Community Outreach, Research on Health Disparities
and Training (EXPORT); and the Advanced Center for Mental Health
Disparities. Website: www.multiculturalmentalhealth.org.
Cambridge
Health Alliance is a regional healthcare system with three hospitals
and more than twenty primary care practices in Cambridge, Somerville,
and Boston's metro-North communities. As a teaching affiliate of
Harvard Medical School, Cambridge Health Alliance offers medical
residency/training programs and undergraduate learning experiences
in hospital and community settings. Cambridge Health Alliance also
includes the Cambridge Public Health Department, CHA Physicians
Organization (CHAPO), and Network Health, a managed Medicaid plan.
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Harris
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Phone: 617-499-8323
Cell: 781-424-3293
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Cecere
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Phone: 617-503-8428
Cell: 617-921-9613
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