%0 Journal Article %T Mental Health Treatment Among Nursing Home Residents With Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias. %A Huan T %A Intrator O %A Simning A %A Boockvar K %A Grabowski DC %A Cai S %J J Am Med Dir Assoc %V 25 %N 8 %D 2024 Jun 14 %M 38885931 %F 7.802 %R 10.1016/j.jamda.2024.105088 %X OBJECTIVE: To examine the prevalence of mental health treatment among nursing home (NH) long-stay residents with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD) and explore factors associated with utilization.
METHODS: Retrospective cohort study. Minimum Data Set data (April 2017-September 2018), Medicare Master Beneficiary Summary File, Part B Carrier file and Part D prescription file were used to identify mental illness and ADRD diagnoses, patient characteristics, and mental health treatment.
METHODS: All US Medicare- or Medicaid-certified NHs. Fee-for-service Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 and older who had a quarterly or annual Minimum Data Set assessment with ADRD and were enrolled in Medicare Parts B and D. Two cohorts: residents with both ADRD and psychiatric disorders; residents with ADRD only.
METHODS: Primary outcomes: receipt of (1) any mental health treatment (medication or psychotherapy); (2) any psychotherapy in a calendar quarter.
RESULTS: antipsychotics, antidepressants, hypnotics, antiepileptics, short-session ( ≤ 30 minutes), long-session ( ≥ 45 minutes), and family/group psychotherapy. Covariates included predisposing, enabling characteristics, and needs factors. Generalized Estimating Equation models of quarterly data, nested within patients, were estimated for each outcome among each cohort.
RESULTS: Analyses included 1,913,945 resident-quarter observations from 503,077 unique NH long-stay residents. Overall, 68.5% of NH long-stay residents with ADRD have psychiatric disorders; of these, 85% received mental health treatment. African American or Hispanic residents were less likely to use antidepressants. African American residents or residents living in rural locations were less likely to receive long-session psychotherapy. Hispanic residents were more likely to receive long-session psychotherapy. Residents in minority groups were more likely to receive group/family psychotherapy.
CONCLUSIONS: Most of NH long-stay residents with ADRD had psychiatric disorders and most of them received treatment. Antidepressants or long-session psychotherapy were less likely to be provided to African American residents. Factors that determine the efficacy of mental health treatment and reasons for the racial disparities require further exploration.