Who is paying the price? Loss of health insurance coverage early in psychosis

Tyler J Dodds, Vivek H Phutane, B Jamie Stevens, Scott W Woods, Michael J Sernyak, Vinod H Srihari, Tyler J Dodds, Vivek H Phutane, B Jamie Stevens, Scott W Woods, Michael J Sernyak, Vinod H Srihari

Abstract

Objective: Discontinuities in health insurance coverage may make it difficult for individuals early in psychosis to receive the services that are critical in determining long-term outcome. This study reports on the rates and continuity of insurance coverage among a cohort of early-psychosis patients enrolled in Specialized Treatment Early in Psychosis (STEP) at the Connecticut Mental Health Center.

Methods: Insurance status at baseline, six months, and 12 months was collected from 82 participants from a combination of self-reports, clinical chart review, clinician reports, and a database maintained by the state Department of Social Services.

Results: A total of 34 participants did not know whether they had health insurance or did not appear for follow-up assessments at six and 12 months. Among the remaining 48 participants, at baseline 18 had private insurance, 13 had public insurance, and 16 had no insurance. By the 12-month assessment, 13 (72%) privately insured and five (38%) publicly insured participants had lost coverage; less than one-third of the 48 participants (N=14) maintained continuous coverage.

Conclusions: Specialty services for individuals experiencing early psychosis should address the difficulty of maintaining health insurance coverage during a period of illness in which continuity of care is critical to recovery.

Conflict of interest statement

disclosures

The authors report no competing interests.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Percentage of participants (N=48) in Specialized Treatment Early in Psychosis (STEP) with uninterrupted health insurance coverage during follow-up

Source: PubMed

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