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1 nts Patients were recruited from a community mental health service.
2  assistance, peer support, medical care, and mental health services.
3 mation on sociodemographics and their use of mental health services.
4 lth service use and costs of FSP with public mental health services.
5 tland's approach to improving the quality of mental health services.
6 n of care from child and adolescent to adult mental health services.
7 hearing loss, tinnitus, hyperacusis), and/or mental health services.
8  for the development of child and adolescent mental health services.
9 fers of help, including housing, extended by mental health services.
10  medical sectors were the largest sources of mental health services.
11 autism spectrum disorders have a high use of mental health services.
12 scents needing psychiatric care received any mental health services.
13  mental health problems; referral and use of mental health services.
14 ords were used to assess the use and cost of mental health services.
15 ugh mainstream secondary care and specialist mental health services.
16  primary and specialist child and adolescent mental health services.
17 young people's views on child and adolescent mental health services.
18 age in psychiatry as the overarching goal of mental health services.
19 he role of primary care child and adolescent mental health services.
20 views of children and young people regarding mental health services.
21 e 500 dollars increase in the costs of other mental health services.
22 vers not having these discussions to receive mental health services.
23 with a current psychiatric disorder accessed mental health services.
24 oms in adolescents change after contact with mental health services.
25 homes could benefit from increased specialty mental health services.
26 ly used indicators for quality monitoring in mental health services.
27 ment, and (3) the subset receiving intensive mental health services.
28 ons, and lacks adequate insurance to pay for mental health services.
29 es that precipitates the need for and use of mental health services.
30  Americans were less likely to use specialty mental health services.
31 children and adolescents 6-17 years old used mental health services.
32 hird of the suicide victims had contact with mental health services.
33 elp consolidate its role in the continuum of mental health services.
34  differ in the organization and financing of mental health services.
35 se disorders affects the likelihood of using mental health services.
36 erral), in providing the most cost-effective mental health services.
37 lack the necessary time to provide effective mental health services.
38 ssed patients, but they did not receive more mental health services.
39  and trends in the delivery and financing of mental health services.
40 hiatric disorder and the need for and use of mental health services.
41  mothers have a high level of unmet need for mental health services.
42 increasing cost sharing on use of outpatient mental health services.
43 orts the improvement of access to adolescent mental health services.
44 cerns about an increasing demand for student mental health services.
45 disaster mitigation through the provision of mental health services.
46 s of a large UK provider of secure inpatient mental health services.
47 f acceptance may pose a barrier to access to mental health services.
48 ome treatment teams should be a priority for mental health services.
49 ignated staff from both paediatric and adult mental health services.
50  behavior, psychiatric morbidity, and use of mental health services.
51 n primary- and secondary-care United Kingdom mental health services.
52 hiatric morbidity, placing a heavy burden on mental health services.
53 try services (2.17 times as high), and other mental health services (1.59 times as high) and were ind
54      20% had previously been in contact with mental health services, 12% within a year of the offence
55 ient claims were analyzed for adult users of mental health services (180,000/year on average) from a
56 D, 47% had recurrent GAD, 64% reported using mental health services, 47% took psychiatric medication,
57 The number of respondents using any 12-month mental health services (57 [2%; Nigeria] to 1477 [18%; U
58 than African American youth to use specialty mental health services (6.1% vs 3.2%), but services prov
59              Among cases receiving intensive mental health services, 77.9% received a diagnosis befor
60                          In well-coordinated mental-health services, a decline in case load alone doe
61 " (SMI) and required the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) to develo
62                          Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, National Institut
63 ted sources of insurance coverage and use of mental health services among adults with and without sev
64                              The underuse of mental health services among black Americans remains a s
65                       The high rate of using mental health services among Operation Iraqi Freedom vet
66 rapy, and waiting list (WL) of 13 outpatient mental health services among patients with a lifetime ps
67 ated by future studies, has implications for mental health services among the Amish, as well as devel
68       No increase was observed in the use of mental health services among VA patients with PTSD or ot
69 n and adolescents emphasize a lack of use of mental health services among youth, but few national est
70     The proportionate increase in the use of mental health services among youths with more severe imp
71                  INTERPRETATION: Past use of mental health services and a diagnosis of non-affective
72                                  Past use of mental health services and a diagnosis of non-affective
73 t the interface between child and adolescent mental health services and adult mental health services
74                         Child and adolescent mental health services and adult mental health services
75 Iraq was associated with high utilization of mental health services and attrition from military servi
76 zations also advocate for improved access to mental health services and avoidance of stigmatization o
77  psychotic symptoms (attenuated or frank) in mental health services and better understanding of their
78 vivors of disasters are reluctant to utilize mental health services and face barriers to accessing ca
79 orted history of cancer had increased use of mental health services and had increased reports of unme
80 ected both in the overall number of users of mental health services and in their resources to pay for
81 ribbeans, had significantly lower receipt of mental health services and lower perceived service needs
82 epression screening results and could access mental health services and obtain medications through Gr
83  adolescent mental health services and adult mental health services and outcomes of poor transition.
84  issues positively influences the receipt of mental health services and should be actively pursued in
85 d complex personality disorders in community mental health services and similar settings.
86  probability of use of each of four types of mental health services and the intensity of outpatient t
87 professionals involved, including those from mental health services and the surgical and oncology tea
88  service users were recruited from secondary mental health services and their views on their personal
89  with masked outcome assessments in three UK mental-health services and one neurological-outpatient d
90 ance confounders between treatment (users of mental health services) and control (non-users of mental
91            Use of psychotropic drugs, use of mental health services, and direct health care costs wer
92  allowing for medical visits, consultations, mental health services, and pharmacologic monitoring of
93 s covering gang membership, violence, use of mental health services, and psychiatric diagnoses measur
94 e inequality, mental health problems, use of mental health services, and resilience (defined as the a
95  disorders or mental health problems, use of mental health services, and resilience.
96 ciated with substantial disability, need for mental health services, and risk for recurrence.
97 ns in the relationships among income, use of mental health services, and sector of care are examined
98 hosis detected by ARMS services in secondary mental health services, and to develop and externally va
99                              Rates of use of mental health services are extremely low among preschool
100                                   Adolescent mental health services are patchy across the world.
101              Substantial cost reductions for mental health services are primarily a result of reducti
102 nationally, the clinical outcomes of routine mental health services are rarely recorded or reported;
103                                              Mental health services are typically subject to higher c
104  medicine were as likely to use conventional mental health services as respondents with mental disord
105 ETATION: Our findings show that contact with mental health services at age 14 years by adolescents wi
106 the use of PTSD treatment services and other mental health services at Department of Veterans Affairs
107 ychological effects and suggest the need for mental health services both before and after the event.
108 ely mentally ill subjects were high users of mental health services but their use of general medical
109 ve been recent calls for increased access to mental health services, but access may be limited owing
110  a number of ethical issues that affect most mental health services, but it also generates new ones,
111  of victims and perpetrators in contact with mental health services, but that mental health services
112                       Although the use of VA mental health services by patients with PTSD was substan
113  households, for trends in outpatient use of mental health services by persons 6 to 17 years of age;
114 National Health Service child and adolescent mental health service (CAMHS) clinics in three regions i
115  in 2005, reported that child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) in Europe differed substa
116 indings suggest that aspects of provision of mental health services can affect suicide rates in clini
117 s, Public Health Services, Mental Disorders, Mental Health Services, Community Mental Health Services
118 nd cohort visited a hospital ED and accessed mental health services compared with the control cohort.
119 ms and behaviours, socio-economic status and mental health service contact).
120 rgency service costs declined by $1721; jail mental health services costs declined by $1641; and hous
121 and mostly treatable, improvements to prison mental health services could counteract the cycle of reo
122 ontact with mental health services, but that mental health services could play a major role in primar
123     Among the children defined as in need of mental health services, defined by an estimator of menta
124                          Most of the data on mental health service delivery come from three sources:
125        Only recently has research focused on mental health service delivery following disasters.
126                       Five themes are key to mental health service delivery in Zimbabwe: policy and l
127  middle-income countries fill a major gap in mental health service delivery.
128 ial court-ordered program of community-based mental health services designed to improve outcomes for
129                  Outpatient care, especially mental health services, diagnostic imaging, and visits w
130       Preschool children who are not seeking mental health services do not have high rates of disrupt
131  Furthermore, nearly 60% of youth in need of mental health services do not receive the care they need
132  problems or who needed but could not access mental health services due to cost had received such car
133    Only 28.3% of children received specialty mental health services during the year, although 42.4% h
134                                              Mental health services elsewhere in the UK and in other
135                                              Mental health services embedded within school systems ca
136 Disorders, Mental Health Services, Community Mental Health Services, Emergency Services Psychiatric,
137               Immigrants are unlikely to use mental health services, even when they have a recent dis
138 arkedly higher use of clinically appropriate mental health services following a psychiatric hospitali
139                  These findings suggest that mental health services for adolescents with depression c
140  well resourced community and hospital-based mental health services for adolescents, with greater inv
141 ernment increased the out-of-pocket price of mental health services for adults by up to euro200 (US$2
142 lescent mental health services to specialist mental health services for adults is well documented in
143 lescent mental health services to specialist mental health services for adults.
144 in the planning, monitoring, and delivery of mental health services for children and adolescents are
145  in the national evaluation of the Community Mental Health Services for Children and Their Families P
146       These findings underscore the need for mental health services for many decades for veterans wit
147 emergency care in women and use of inpatient mental health services for men.
148 tric disorders, receive (and do not receive) mental health services from which professionals in what
149  health services: psychiatry services, other mental health services, general medical services, human
150 l health services) and control (non-users of mental health services) groups.
151                       Most soldiers who used mental health services had not been referred, even thoug
152        The important components of community mental health services have been evaluated from the poin
153                            This must include mental health services if the social inclusion and human
154 o identify bottlenecks and opportunities for mental health service improvement in Zimbabwe and to gen
155 e describe field experiences in establishing mental health services in five humanitarian settings.
156 n requiring parity in insurance coverage for mental health services in group health plans and Medicar
157 estimate an increase of 2.3 million users of mental health services in Medicaid and nearly 2 million
158 ur National Health Service primary child and mental health services in Oxfordshire, UK.
159 fessionals and consumers, the integration of mental health services in primary care, and the use of n
160  trafficked people in contact with secondary mental health services in South London, UK, between Jan
161 tween 1997 and 2006 who were in contact with mental health services in the 12 months before death.
162 ictims and perpetrators who had contact with mental health services in the 12 months before homicide,
163  We requested information about contact with mental health services in the 12 months before the homic
164 ce, including data on people in contact with mental health services in the 12 months before their dea
165    90 homicide victims (6%) had contact with mental health services in the 12 months before their dea
166 ational themes have particularly impacted on mental health services in the past 12 months and are ref
167 14-year-old adolescents who had contact with mental health services in the past year had a greater de
168  time of the offence, and care received from mental health services in the past.
169 y-five percent of Iraq war veterans accessed mental health services in the year after returning home;
170 givers and adolescents reported contact with mental health services in the year before baseline.
171 existing mental disorders who reported using mental health services in the year before the hurricane,
172 rs were more likely than others to have used mental health services in the year prior to interview.
173 ive mental disorder had had any contact with mental-health services in the previous year.
174 yses, factors associated with utilization of mental health services included female sex, higher educa
175 ensure delivery of high-quality standardized mental health services, including centralized workload m
176 ed trends in use of inpatient and outpatient mental health services, including pharmacotherapy, among
177 ercentage of youths receiving any outpatient mental health service increased from 9.2% in 1996-1998 t
178       Reductions in inpatient and outpatient mental health service intensity and reimbursements docum
179 romising approach for extending the reach of mental health services interventions into diverse commun
180 al detention in South Africa, integration of mental health services into a health package in selected
181 nding mental health coverage: integration of mental health services into primary care; expansion of h
182 r follow-up of people who attempt suicide by mental health services is key to prevent future suicidal
183 tion between health insurance and the use of mental health services is unclear.
184 concern exists over the quality of emergency mental health services, little is known about the mental
185  delivery of timely and appropriate disaster mental health services may facilitate their integration
186 an were the Caucasian subjects, who received mental health services more continuously.
187  therapy) (n = 90), or referral to community mental health services (n = 89).
188 s 6-17 years old who were defined as needing mental health services, nearly 80% did not receive menta
189                         Child and adolescent mental health services need to consider how we serve you
190 ncer survivors were more likely to have used mental health services (odds ratio, 1.60 among those wit
191 thors sought to determine whether integrated mental health services or enhanced referral to specialty
192   Most participants (60%) were not using any mental health services or psychotropic medications.
193 cts reported important barriers to receiving mental health services, particularly the perception of s
194      Research investigating which aspects of mental health service provision are most effective in pr
195                      In particular, improved mental health service provision is needed for all people
196                                   Aspects of mental health service provision might have an effect on
197 s was categorized according to the sector of mental health services: psychiatry services, other menta
198 gth of stay, percentage of members receiving mental health services, rates of follow-up after hospita
199        We aimed to examine the uptake of key mental health service recommendations over time and to i
200 y feedback at 6 mo), and tolerability (acute mental health services referral).
201                   No subjects required acute mental health services referral.
202 me inequality as a determinant of the use of mental health services reported no association.
203    This question falls within the purview of mental health services research, which is a multidiscipl
204 elevance, reach, and public health impact of mental health services research.
205 ort the notion that treatment strategies and mental health services should address a wide range of ne
206  evidence is now needed on how maternity and mental health services should address domestic violence
207 nts aged 14-35 years presenting to any of 35 mental health services sites across England with first-e
208  a key issue as individuals, communities and mental health services struggle to combine technical eff
209 t extent will existing quality standards for mental health services suffice when we know that often p
210 tric disorders receiving treatment in public mental health service systems in five U.S. cities.
211 ent of bereaved parents were currently using mental health services (talk therapy, psychotropic medic
212 ns and the risk of patients disengaging from mental health services temporarily or enduringly.
213 e plan in Ontario promotes greater access to mental health services than is available in the United S
214 impairment and higher rates of recent use of mental health services than the subjects with true negat
215 tress were more likely to accept referral to mental health services than those with less intense reac
216 d risk for suicide may tend to be in need of mental health services that can help them to cope with a
217 d limited utility in predicting the level of mental health services that were needed after deployment
218                          In well coordinated mental health services the imposition of compulsory supe
219  trend for primary care providers to provide mental health services, these analyses indicate a net ec
220 in the control group to report receiving the mental health services they believed they needed.
221 epression screening results and could access mental health services through Group Health.
222 , TennCare, rapidly shifted the provision of mental health services to a fully capitated, specialty "
223 to move from specialist child and adolescent mental health services to specialist mental health servi
224 sitions from specialist child and adolescent mental health services to specialist mental health servi
225 specialist health workers to provide quality mental-health services to young people, and the stigma a
226 voluntary organizations, social services and mental health services; training of staff on cross-cultu
227 ent (p=0.0195), unemployment (p=0.0124), and mental health service use (p=0.0120, p=0.0032, and p=0.0
228 tem to conduct a longitudinal examination of mental health service use among Spanish-speaking versus
229  the prevalence of psychiatric disorders and mental health service use among these informal caregiver
230 Parents completed self-report assessments of mental health service use and barriers, prolonged grief,
231                                    Community mental health service use and codes were modeled as a fu
232 re-matched control group was used to compare mental health service use and costs of FSP with public m
233 nown about differences in the unmet need for mental health service use between African Americans and
234                     They determined rates of mental health service use by children and adolescents 3-
235 has demonstrated marked changes in inpatient mental health service use by children and adolescents in
236                             Prescription and mental health service use data were collected from Medic
237                                    Specialty mental health service use for 1 year after contact with
238 vey of Black Americans by examining 12-month mental health service use for African Americans and Cari
239 ies have examined the effects of language on mental health service use for Latinos who prefer Spanish
240 a has tended to ignore patterns and costs of mental health service use in late life.
241 M-IV psychiatric disorders and correlates of mental health service use in rural African American and
242  lacked full-year insurance coverage had any mental health service use in the 2004-2006 period, compa
243              Factors associated with current mental health service use included more recent loss, pri
244 he severely mentally ill subjects, community mental health service use was related to longer duration
245 ong those with other chronic illnesses), and mental health service use was significantly greater amon
246                                High rates of mental health service use were also identified in this p
247 services due to cost had received such care, mental health service use would have increased from 7.2%
248 tioning, psychiatric comorbidities, lifetime mental health service use, and new depressive episodes d
249 service use included more recent loss, prior mental health service use, subclinical/increased depress
250 re conducted to obtain national estimates of mental health service use, unmet need for such services,
251 rity of mental disorders over 12 months, and mental health service use, were assessed with the WMH co
252 rbid disorders, psychosocial impairment, and mental health service use.
253 uage may be more important than ethnicity in mental health service use.
254  sociodemographic characteristics, and child mental health service use.
255 isorders Fourth Edition and an assessment of mental health service use.
256  Events Scale, and a questionnaire regarding mental health service use.
257 mptoms, family functioning, life events, and mental health service use.
258  adolescent mental health services and adult mental health services use rigid age cut-offs to delinea
259 IV major depressive disorder (MDD), 12-month mental health services use, and MDD disability as quanti
260      The present study examined the types of mental health services used and their costs for several
261 uidelines on oral health-related outcomes in mental health service users is untested.
262 in MFQ sum scores from baseline contact with mental health services using multilevel mixed-effects re
263                      This study examined the mental health service utilization and costs of 321 disch
264                                              Mental health service utilization following a disaster i
265 mines the rates, predictors, and barriers to mental health service utilization following a disaster.
266                      Research is evolving on mental health service utilization.
267 tional outcomes, such as quality of life and mental health services utilization and expanding the rea
268                     Emergency department and mental health service visits also were quantified.
269 of the association between income and use of mental health services was carried out for the populatio
270                        Through a specialized mental-health service, we identified unmedicated individ
271  by suicide within 12 months of contact with mental health services were included (1997-2012).
272               Data on people in contact with mental health services were obtained via a questionnaire
273                                              Mental health services were reported on a life history c
274  to need, want, and often access bereavement mental health services, which could be offered in oncolo
275 onths after HIV diagnosis, and referring for mental health services, which may positively impact adhe
276 eform will lead to 1.15 million new users of mental health services, which represents a 4.5% increase
277 hat currently play a major role in financing mental health services will play an even greater role af
278 e rates and predictors of admission to acute mental health services within 1 year of contact with CRT
279 one in five suicide victims had contact with mental health services within a month before their suici

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