Racial and ethnic disparities in telemental health use among publicly insured children
Racial and ethnic disparities in telemental health use among publicly insured children

Racial and ethnic disparities in telemental health use among publicly insured children

Am J Manag Care. 2025 Mar;31(3):119-126. doi: 10.37765/ajmc.2025.89674.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The COVID-19 pandemic propelled telemental health utilization among children seeking mental health (MH) services. We examined racial and ethnic disparities in telemental health use among publicly insured children before and following COVID-19.

METHODS: We identified 36,877,141 child-year observations among publicly insured children aged 3 to 17 years with MH-related encounters in a given year from 2016 to 2020. Multivariable linear regressions controlling for individual- and county-level confounders estimated changes in telemental health use before (2016-2019) and following the pandemic (2020) and how these changes differed by individual- and county-level race and ethnicity.

RESULTS: The percentage of publicly insured children using telemental health increased from 2.74% pre-COVID-19 to 35.90% in 2020. Among non-Hispanic White children, 3.41% used telemental health care pre-COVID-19, which increased by 36.49 percentage points (PP) in 2020. Non-Hispanic Black children had a lower percentage of telemental health use (2.50%) pre-COVID-19, which increased by 31.20 PP in 2020, resulting in a 5.39 PP smaller increase than non-Hispanic White children (P < .001). Similarly, Hispanic, non-Hispanic Asian, and non-Hispanic Pacific Islander children had 6.19 PP, 15.45 PP, and 12.10 PP smaller increases in telemental health use in 2020 compared with non-Hispanic White children (all P < .001). Moreover, children in counties with the highest (vs lowest) quartiles of non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic populations had lower pre-COVID-19 telemental health use and smaller increases in 2020 (all P < .001).

CONCLUSIONS: Racial and ethnic disparities in telemental health use widened following COVID-19. Future research should evaluate how telemental health use impacted MH care quality and outcomes among publicly insured children.

PMID:40053404 | DOI:10.37765/ajmc.2025.89674