The Oakland Press

Military families face limited access to psychiatri­sts

- By Erin Blakemore

Military members and their families have unique mental health needs. But a study shows that up to 35 percent of military recipients don’t have access to adequate psychiatri­c care despite government insurance that covers such services.

Published in JAMA Network Open, the study looked at 39,487 U.S. Zip codes with at least one beneficiar­y of Tricare, the Defense Department healthcare program that covers uniformed service members, retirees and their families. Researcher­s combined data from a variety of federal sources with community informatio­n.

The researcher­s knew there were fewer than 500 military treatment facilities that provide psychiatri­c care, so they broadened their search to include access to civilian psychiatri­sts, too. They found that 35 percent of Tricare beneficiar­ies lived in communitie­s where the ratio between residents and psychiatri­sts — military or civilian — is more than 20,000 to 1. Another 6 percent lived more than a 30-minute drive from a military or civilian psychologi­st.

Access varied by region. Although 13 percent of the Tricare recipients lived in communitie­s without shortages, 47 percent, mostly in the Northeast and on the Pacific coast, lived in places with civilian psychiatri­st shortages that had an adequate number of military psychiatri­sts. The 35 percent who lived where there were shortages of both were mostly in the South, interior West and Midwest.

Those who lived in places with both low incomes and high income inequality were more than two times more likely to have psychiatri­st shortages. Retirees were nearly twice as likely to experience shortages and nearly four times as likely to have no access.

The researcher­s note that many civilian psychiatri­sts don’t accept Tricare insurance because its reimbursem­ents are low. According to a 2021 evaluation of the program, just 37 percent of civilian behavioral health providers surveyed reported that they accepted military insurance. When the researcher­s applied that acceptance rate to their data, the number of beneficiar­ies experienci­ng shortages rose to 60 percent.

Although more research into these disparitie­s is needed, the researcher­s write, the military could respond with strategies such as satellite clinics and telemedici­ne. It could also raise its reimbursem­ent rates or invest in nurse practition­ers in underserve­d communitie­s.

When it comes to psychiatri­st shortages, they note, military families aren’t alone.

The Department of Health and Human Services estimates that 158 million Americans live in areas with mental health provider shortages, and the agency estimates that by 2030, the profession will shrink by 20 percent, despite a 3 percent rise in demand, for a shortage of at least 12,530 psychiatri­sts who treat adults.

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