PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Alyna T. Chien AU - JoAnna Leyenaar AU - Marisa Tomaino AU - Steven Woloshin AU - Lindsey Leininger AU - Erin R. Barnett AU - Jennifer L. McLaren AU - Ellen Meara TI - Difficulty Obtaining Behavioral Health Services for Children: A National Survey of Multiphysician Practices AID - 10.1370/afm.2759 DP - 2022 Jan 01 TA - The Annals of Family Medicine PG - 42--50 VI - 20 IP - 1 4099 - http://www.annfammed.org/content/20/1/42.short 4100 - http://www.annfammed.org/content/20/1/42.full SO - Ann Fam Med2022 Jan 01; 20 AB - PURPOSE In the United States, primary care practices rely on scarce resources to deliver evidence-based care for children with behavioral health disorders such as depression, anxiety, other mental illness, or substance use disorders. We estimated the proportion of practices that have difficulty accessing these resources and whether practices owned by a health system or participating in Medicaid accountable care organizations (ACOs) report less difficulty.METHODS This national cross-sectional study examined how difficult it is for practices to obtain pediatric (1) medication advice, (2) evidence-based psychotherapy, and (3) family-based therapy. We used the National Survey of Healthcare Organizations and Systems 2017-2018 (46.9% response rate), which sampled multiphysician primary and multispecialty care practices including 1,410 practices that care for children. We characterized practices’ experience as “difficult” relative to “not at all difficult” using a 4-point ordinal scale. We used mixed-effects generalized linear models to estimate differences comparing system-owned vs independent practices and Medicaid ACO participants vs nonparticipants, adjusting for practice attributes.RESULTS More than 85% of practices found it difficult to obtain help with evidence-based elements of pediatric behavioral health care. Adjusting for practice attributes, the percent experiencing difficulty was similar between system-owned and independent practices but was less for Medicaid ACO participants for medication advice (81% vs 89%; P = .021) and evidence-based psychotherapy (81% vs 90%; P = .006); differences were not significant for family-based treatment (85% vs 91%; P = .107).CONCLUSIONS Most multiphysician practices struggle to obtain advice and services for child behavioral health needs, which are increasing nationally. Future studies should investigate the source of observed associations.