Characterization of Rural Mental Health Service Systems
- 1 June 1999
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Rural Health
- Vol. 15 (3) , 296-307
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-0361.1999.tb00751.x
Abstract
This paper explores two mental health systems in rural North Carolina that provide services to people with severe mental disorders. Recent findings show rural people with mental disorders receive less mental health care than their urban counterparts. This study asks whether rural service systems differ from urban systems in the way that their services are coordinated and structured. A popular conception is that public mental health systems in the United States are uncoordinated with many services provided outside the mental health sector. Rural service providers are seen as even more dependent on non specialized mental health providers than their urban counterparts. While many rural service barriers are attributed to the rural environment, little is known about rural service systems and how their organization might contribute to or negate barriers to care. Social network methods were used in this study to compare two rural with four urban systems of care. Findings confirm that mental health systems fit thede factohypothesis, but that rural systems differ in ways not anticipated by the hypothesis. Rather than being more dependent on non mental health agencies, rural mental health agencies are more interdependent.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- De Facto Mental Health Services in the Rural SouthJournal Of Health Care For The Poor and Underserved, 1995
- Demographic factors in the use of children's mental health services.American Journal of Public Health, 1993
- Fixed list versus snowball selection of social networksSocial Science Research, 1992
- Of problems and perspectives: Predicting the use of mental health services by parents of urban youthChildren and Youth Services Review, 1992
- Lessons from the Program on Chronic Mental IllnessHealth Affairs, 1992
- Barriers to the Care of Persons With Dual Diagnoses: Organizational and Financing IssuesSchizophrenia Bulletin, 1990
- The De Facto US Mental Health Services SystemArchives of General Psychiatry, 1978
- The NIMH Community Support Program: Pilot Approach to a Needed Social Reform*Schizophrenia Bulletin, 1978
- Mental health services can be organized to prevent chronic disabilityCommunity Mental Health Journal, 1970
- The Causes of Racial Disturbances: A Comparison of Alternative ExplanationsAmerican Sociological Review, 1970