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Use of antipsychotic medications in treating schizophrenia among different financing and delivery systems.

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TLDR
Capitation of mental health services provides incentives for more cost-effective treatments and suggests that capitation can affect the use of substitute services not in the capitation rate.
Abstract
Background: In 1995 in an effort to control costs, the State of Colorado implemented a pilot capitated payment system for individuals eligible for public financing of their mental health services. Contracts were with both Not-For-Profit (NFP) firms and For-Profit (FP) firms; the remainder were in the fee-for-service system (FFS). Pharmaceuticals were not included in the capitation rate. However, antipsychotic medications were included in the formularies for consumers who received their medical care through a Health Maintenance Organization (HMO). Aims: This paper examines the use of antipsychotic medication compared to the use of atypical antipsychotics among consumers who are (i) enrolled in a medical HMO or not enrolled in a medical HMO and (ii) whose mental health services are reimbursed on a feefor-service basis (FFS) or through a capitated system. Methods: Data for this study were collected between 1995 and 1997 as part of the Colorado’s Medicaid Mental Health Capitation Pilot Program. Atypical antipsychotics included in the study are: clozapine, risperidone, and olanzapine. The sample of this study consisted of 282 individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia. Results: The utilization of antipsychotics was lower among consumers in HMOs. Compared to consumers in FFS areas of the state, the utilization of atypical antipsychotics was higher in capitated areas of the state. Discussion: There was a strong incentive for the utilization of atypical antipsychotics to increase in capitated systems, unless consumers received their medication prescriptions through an HMO. Limitations include differences in observable and unobservable characteristics among the FFS, DC and MBHO areas, unavoidable selection bias and the small number of HMO enrollees. Conclusions: Capitation of mental health services provides incentives for more cost-effective treatments. HMO enrollment was not a crucial factor to determine access to atypical antipsychotic prescriptions.

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TL;DR: Increasing the amount of money that people pay for medicines may reduce insurers' medicine expenditures and may reduce patients' medicine use, and the certainty of the evidence was found to be generally low to very low.
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Variation in outpatient mental health service utilization under capitation.

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The Impact of Capitated Financing on Psychiatric Emergency Services

TL;DR: The findings suggest that capitation does not necessarily reduce the quality of care provided to clients, and the implementation of capitation was associated with a sustained decrease in utilization of psychiatric emergency services provided by hospital emergency departments.
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Second-generation antipsychotic use among stimulant-using children, by organization of medicaid mental health.

TL;DR: Carve-outs, versus other arrangements, were associated with lower second-generation antipsychotic use among Medicaid-enrolled children across fee-for-service, integrated managed care, and managed behavioral health carve-out organizational structures.
References
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Clozapine-induced agranulocytosis. Incidence and risk factors in the United States

TL;DR: The increasing risk of agranulocytosis with age and the reduced incidence after the first six months of treatment provide additional guidelines for the prescription and monitoring of clozapine treatment in the future.
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Revised Prevalence Estimates of Mental Disorders in the United States: Using a Clinical Significance Criterion to Reconcile 2 Surveys' Estimates

TL;DR: Establishing the clinical significance of disorders in the community is crucial for estimating treatment need and characterizing the utility of clinically significant symptoms in determining treatment need even when some criteria of the disorder are not met.
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Cost of Relapse in Schizophrenia

TL;DR: Because loss of medication efficacy and medication noncompliance act synergistically on relapse, substantial inpatient cost savings can be realized by linking better pharmacologic treatments of schizophrenia with more effective strategies to manage medication non compliance.
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A comparison of risperidone and haloperidol for the prevention of relapse in patients with schizophrenia.

TL;DR: Adult outpatients with clinically stable schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder have a lower risk of relapse if they are treated with risperidone than if they were treated with haloperidol.
Journal ArticleDOI

Overview: maintenance therapy in psychiatry. I. Schizophrenia

TL;DR: This overview of the literature on prophylactic treatment of schizophrenia with maintenance antipsychotic drugs and affective disorders with lithium and tricyclics finds these drugs provide the potential for truly preventive psychiatry.
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Capitation of mental health services provides incentives for more cost-effective treatments.