News

Five million children aged 5-17 treated for mental illness each year


 

References

An average of 9.3% of children aged 5-17 years received some type of treatment for a mental health disorder each year from 2009 to 2011, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality reported.

That 9.3% translates into about 5 million U.S. children receiving some form of treatment for a mental health disorder annually. The largest share, 7.0%, was children who received ambulatory care, while 2.1% received prescription medications and 0.2% of all children aged 5-17 years received other services that included hospital stays, emergency department visits, and home health care, according to the AHRQ.

Spending for medical services, however, was divided a little more equally, as the 0.2% of children categorized as “other” accounted for 21.1% of the average medical expenditure of $10.9 billion annually over the study period. Prescription medications represented 44% of all spending for children aged 5-17 and 34.9% went to ambulatory care, data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey show.

rfranki@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Tailored MBSR intervention helped moms in treatment for opioid addiction
MDedge Family Medicine
Brincidofovir promising for adenovirus infection in early data
MDedge Family Medicine
Adenotonsillectomy offers moderate cardiac benefits in children
MDedge Family Medicine
Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine decreased risk of sinusitis, pneumonia in youngest kids
MDedge Family Medicine
Paleo-Parenting
MDedge Family Medicine
Sunrise calls
MDedge Family Medicine
HPV vaccine rates perpetuate racial and geographic cancer disparities
MDedge Family Medicine
Children born to mothers with RA more likely to be born early
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Pediatric NAFLD worsens as kids age
MDedge Family Medicine
Cigarettes less popular among teens in 2013, but tobacco use remains high
MDedge Family Medicine