Abstract
Introduction
After the 2004 FDA box warning raised concerns about increased suicidal ideation among youth taking antidepressants, antidepressant use decreased for White youth but slightly increased for Black and Latino youth. Better understanding of patient and provider factors contributing to these differences is needed to improve future risk warning dissemination.
Methods
We analyzed antidepressant prescriptions for youth aged 5‐17 in 2002‐2006 Medicaid claims data from four states (CA, FL, NC, and NY). In multilevel models, we assessed provider‐ and patient‐level contributions to changes in antidepressant use by race/ethnicity and compared responses to the box warning between providers with large (>2/3) and small (<1/3) proportions of minority patients.
Results
A significant amount of variance in overall prescribing patterns (calculated by the ICC) was explained at the provider level. Significant provider‐level variation was also identified in the differential effect of the box warning by racial/ethnic group. In a test of the influence of provider panel mix, we found that providers with large proportions of minority patients reduced antidepressant prescribing more slowly after the box warning than other providers.
Discussion
This study is the first to assess provider‐ and patient‐level variation in the impact of a health care policy change on treatment disparities. Black and Latino youth Medicaid beneficiaries were seen by largely different providers than their White counterparts, and these distinct providers were influential in driving antidepressant prescription patterns following the box warning. Concerted outreach to providers of minority beneficiaries is needed to ensure that risk warnings and clinical innovations diffuse swiftly across racial/ethnic minority groups.
Keywords: racial/ethnic differences in health and health care, modeling: multi‐level, psychiatry
1. INTRODUCTION
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) utilizes box warnings to disseminate information regarding risk of adverse effects associated with medication use. The issuance of box warnings has led to significant declines in overall use of the targeted drugs;1, 2, 3 however, the diffusion of new safety guidelines takes time4 and occurs at differing speeds across racial/ethnic groups, which may result in a lesser quality of care for racial/ethnic minority patients.5, 6 After the 2004 box warning on antidepressants warned of an increased risk of suicidal ideation among young people, rates of antidepressant use significantly decreased for White youth, but slightly increased for Black and Latino youth,7, 8 leading to a reduction in the racial/ethnic difference 1 in antidepressant use. The 2004 antidepressant box warning provides a relevant case study to investigate how warnings about the risks of medication diffuse differentially across patients from different racial/ethnic groups, and may provide important lessons for understanding efforts to stem the inappropriate prescription of opiate pain medications and other medications (eg, benzodiazepines) with high risk of abuse, addiction, or negative side effects.
Whether a racial/ethnic minority youth with depression is prescribed an antidepressant is likely to depend largely on the provider from whom they receive care. In studies of adult patients, providers that treat predominantly racial/ethnic minority patients are less likely to be influenced by new and emerging external scientific evidence compared to providers that treat predominantly White patients.9, 10 Similarly, it has been found that clinicians in health care settings that serve diverse patients are less likely to employ evidence‐based practices (EBPs).11, 12, 13 As such, guidelines published by the FDA and other organizations may be less likely to influence treatment patterns of providers of racial/ethnic minority patients than providers of non‐Latino White patients.
Ideally, providers and patients (and caregivers of youth patients) make decisions jointly about the treatment plan.14 However, providers often use medical language that patients do not understand, and rarely ask patients about their preferences with respect to medications, therapies, and procedures.15 Provider‐patient communication is even worse among more marginalized patient groups such as racial/ethnic minorities.15 Clinicians may be less likely to adequately communicate potential risks associated with a particular medical treatment to minority patients than White patients due to cultural and linguistic barriers.
Providers with specialty training in mental health (ie, psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers) are more likely to effectively receive, interpret, and disseminate information regarding EBPs than are pediatricians and other primary care providers (PCPs). This suggests that youth that receive mental health treatment from only a PCP (approximately 1/3 of all youth receiving mental health treatment16) may be at a greater risk for missing key risk information. This may be of greater concern for racial/ethnic minority youth given that they are more likely than Whites to seek mental health care with PCPs than specialists.17, 18 Furthermore, racial/ethnic disparities in diagnosis and treatment (through counseling and/or medication) of anxiety and depression are greater in primary care than in psychiatric service settings.19 The reduced access to and utilization of specialty mental health care providers for racial/ethnic minority youth may thus present additional obstacles to effective dissemination of risk information to minority patients and their caregivers.
At the patient level, there are several reasons why racial/ethnic minority youth patients and their caregivers may be less likely than White youth patients and their caregivers to respond to an FDA risk warning. Firstly, racial/ethnic minorities tend to receive health information from different sources than Whites and are less likely to trust the information that they receive.20 While there was significant coverage of the box warning in news outlets and the popular press,21 racial/ethnic minority families may have been less exposed to this coverage. Secondly, many consumers avoided depression treatment altogether after the box warning.22, 23, 24 If avoidance of depression treatment occurred more frequently among Whites than Blacks and Latinos post–box warning, this could explain the greater decline in antidepressant use in White patients. Thirdly, racial/ethnic differences in the diffusion of risk warnings may be influenced by the caregiver's level of education,25 and the youth's medical history,26 severity of mental illness, and health insurance plan,27 all factors that typically differ by race/ethnicity.
The youth antidepressant box warning provides a case study to improve our understanding of how providers, patients, and their caregivers respond to risk warnings, and how the racial/ethnic makeup of a provider's patient panel influences treatment after a risk warning. Using multilevel models accounting for nesting of treatment events within patients within providers, we evaluated how the effects of the box warning differ between providers and the amount of variation that is explained at the provider and patient levels. Assessing the provider‐level random effects in these multilevel models, we test the hypothesis that significant variation in prescribing patterns exists between providers and within providers, and test whether additional provider‐level variation over and above race and time effects exists to explain the differential reactions to the antidepressant box warning. Then, to provide more detail on the provider‐level influence on the diffusion of this policy change, we test the hypothesis that providers that treated predominantly White patients were more likely to decrease rates of antidepressant prescriptions post–box warning compared to providers that treated predominantly minority patients.
2. METHODS
2.1. Data
Data are a 10 percent sample of the Medicaid Analytic eXtract (MAX) files for California, Florida, New York, and North Carolina for the years 2002‐2006. These four states were chosen because they are representative of other racially/ethnically diverse states, their large Medicaid beneficiary populations (these states make up over 33 percent of the entire Medicaid population of the United States), and their relatively low rates of Medicaid managed care penetration during the years of study, allowing for a focus on fee for service beneficiaries for whom MAX contains complete data. The MAX data are extracted annually from the Medicaid Statistical Information System (MSIS) and include information on beneficiary demographic information, services used, and medications supplied, as well as International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD‐9) diagnostic codes for each service provided. We linked services rendered and prescription drug claims to state provider identification numbers. The final dataset merges the outpatient and pharmacy MAX files and includes eligibility, encounter, and pharmacy data for all youth aged 5‐17 years enrolled in Medicaid programs in these four states during the study period. We defined three time periods: pre–box warning (January 2002 to September 2003), “phase‐in” (October 2003 to October 2004), and post–box warning (November 2004 to December 2006). In October 2004, the FDA issued the warning that antidepressants were associated with an increased risk of suicidal ideation in youth. We excluded claims from the “phase‐in” period because of preliminary FDA advisories starting in October 2003 that could have affected provider awareness of suicidality concerns and prescribing of antidepressants.
The sample consists of claims from non‐Latino White, Black, and Latino youth eligible for Medicaid in each month of analysis, totaling 7 026 029 claims for outpatient visits, inpatient visits, and medication fills, attributed to 1 228 596 Medicaid beneficiaries (365 209 White; 293 782 Black; and 569 605 Latino). We excluded Asian, Native American, and multiracial youth due to small sample sizes.
Claims were aggregated to the patient‐month unit of analysis; each observation contains antidepressant data for a given month for a specific patient. For each patient‐month, we assigned the patient to the provider that he/she saw for the greatest percentage of their outpatient visits in that calendar year. In the case of ties, one of the tied providers was randomly chosen. If there were no visits during the year or there was no available provider identifier, then the patient data were not used for that year. The list of antidepressants was determined using Multum medication classification codes.
This data structure allows for multilevel modeling, which can account for the nonindependence of multiple months of data from the same individual.28 Further, this modeling strategy allows for investigation of provider‐level differences that are not possible in the uni‐level difference‐in‐differences and interrupted time series models used in prior box warning studies. In particular, it allows testing of whether data from multiple individuals seeing the same provider are nonindependent. A further benefit of multilevel models is that they use data from all available individuals and providers, even those with missing data in some of the time periods.
2.2. Model
We implemented a multilevel linear probability model to examine the differential impact by race/ethnicity of the box warning (equations (1a), (1b), (1c), (1d), (1e)), estimating a similar model specification as prior studies but with careful attention to the nesting of multiple patient observations within patients within providers. The first main analysis of interest was to use the multilevel framework to assess the independence (or nonindependence) of observations from patients seen by the same provider. To do so, we added u 00j a provider‐level random intercept (equation 1f) and calculated an intraclass correlation coefficient to measure the variance between and within providers. The second analysis of interest was to assess whether the interaction between race/ethnicity and the change in the slope of antidepressant use post–box warning (β31j in equation (1e)e) varied significantly between providers. This identifies the provider‐level variation in the differential effect of the box warning by racial/ethnic group. For this step, we used likelihood ratio (LR) tests to iteratively test the significance of provider‐level random effects u 01j through u 30j (in equations (1g), (1h), (1i), (1j), (1k), (1l)), ultimately building to a likelihood ratio test comparing models with and without u 31j (a provider‐level random effect on β31j) in equation 1m below.
Level 1 (time):
(1a) |
Level 2 (patient):
(1b) |
(1c) |
(1d) |
(1e) |
Level 3 (provider):
(1f) |
(1g) |
(1h) |
(1i) |
(1j) |
(1k) |
(1l) |
(1m) |
Y tij is the dichotomous dependent variable, coded as 1 if there is a filled prescription for an antidepressant for individual patient i from provider j at month t, and 0 otherwise. Months is a counter variable that equals 1 for the first month of the study period and increases by 1 for every month thereafter, Post‐BW is a 0/1 indicator of whether or not a given month was before or after the box warning came out, and Months‐Post‐BW is a counter variable that equals 1 for the first month after the box warning came out and increases by 1 for every month thereafter. Race/ethnicity (race) was determined using categories of non‐Latino White (“White”), non‐Latino Black or African American (“Black”), and Latino or Hispanic (“Latino”). The coefficients on the raceij variables in level 2 represent interactions between raceij and time variables. Covariances between random effects were assumed to be zero.
In the third analysis of interest, in order to better understand provider‐level variance, we tested the significance of observed provider‐level covariates, estimating a new multilevel model (equations (2a), (2b), (2c), (2d), (2e), (2f), (2g), (2h), (2i)). Specifically, we compared how the diffusion of the box warning across providers varied by the racial/ethnic makeup of their patient panels by estimating the following model, which simplified the patient‐level equations (1b), (1c), (1d), (1e) in order to focus on the provider level without excess interaction terms (equations (2f), (2g), (2h), (2i)):
Level 1 (time):
(2a) |
Level 2 (patient):
(2b) |
(2c) |
(2d) |
(2e) |
Level 3 (provider):
(2f) |
(2g) |
(2h) |
(2i) |
The categorical variable, provider_comp..j, represents the providers’ patient panel, consisting of >2/3, between 2/3 and 1/3, and <1/3 of racial minority patients (Black or Latino). The coefficients on the provider_comp..j variables in level 3 represent interactions between provider_comp..j and the time variables. In particular, we are interested in whether the reactions immediately after the box warning (level shift, γ201) and changes in the post–box warning slope (γ301) were greater or less among providers who had >2/3 racial/ethnic minority patients, as compared to providers who had <1/3 racial/ethnic minority patients. All models were estimated using the STATA 14 software package (StataCorp LLC, College Station, TX, USA).
3. RESULTS
We first describe, by race/ethnicity, the gender, Medicaid eligibility type, probability of any antidepressant fill, and age as of January 2002 or a patient's first appearance in the MAX data (Table 1). As has been found in previous studies, there is a decline in antidepressant use across racial/ethnic groups. We identified significantly smaller declines for Blacks compared to Whites. Latinos were more likely to be female and younger than Whites. Whites were significantly more likely to be eligible for Medicaid via Foster Care compared to Blacks and Latinos, whereas Blacks and Latinos were significantly more likely to be eligible via the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program. Blacks were significantly more likely to be eligible via the Supplemental Security Income program than Whites, whereas Latinos were similar to Whites in this eligibility category.
Table 1.
Total | White | Black | Latino | P‐value for omnibus test of racial/ethnic differences | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
(n = 1 228 596) | (n = 365 209) | (n = 293 782) | (n = 569 605) | ||
% | % | % | % | ||
Rate of antidepressant use | |||||
Pre‐BW | 1.2 | 2.4 | 0.9 | 0.6 | <0.001 |
Post‐BW | 1.0 | 1.9 | 0.7 | 0.5 | |
Gender | |||||
Male | 49.9 | 50.2 | 50.1 | 49.5 | <0.001 |
Female | 50.1 | 49.8 | 49.9 | 50.5 | |
Age at first Medicaid enrollment | |||||
5‐9 years | 44.3 | 42.1 | 42.1 | 46.8 | <0.001 |
10‐13 years | 29.5 | 29.2 | 30.3 | 29.2 | |
14‐17 years | 26.3 | 28.7 | 27.6 | 24.0 | |
Medicaid eligibility | |||||
Foster care | 4.9 | 8.2 | 6.0 | 2.3 | <0.001 |
Temporary assistance for needy families | 20.7 | 16.7 | 24.3 | 21.5 | <0.001 |
Supplemental security income | 5.0 | 4.9 | 8.6 | 3.2 | <0.001 |
State children's health insurance plan | 2.3 | 2.1 | 0.8 | 3.2 | <0.001 |
Racial/ethnic composition of provider panel | |||||
<1/3 Black or Latino youth patients | 12.3 | 36.6 | 3.5 | 1.5 | <0.001 |
Between 1/3 and 2/3 Black or Latino youth patients | 22.4 | 34.6 | 26.0 | 12.7 | |
>2/3 Black or Latino youth patients | 65.3 | 28.8 | 70.5 | 85.8 |
Summary statistics were calculated for unique Medicaid beneficiaries aging from 5 to 17 who had at least one outpatient claim observed in the MAX file and identifiable provider ID from 2002 to 2006.
A majority of all Medicaid youth beneficiaries (66 percennt) in this study, regardless of race/ethnicity, received treatment from providers that have panels composed of >2/3 Black or Latino patients (last row, Table 1). Parsed by race/ethnicity, 30 percent of Whites, 72 percent of Blacks, and 87 percent of Latinos received care from providers that have panels composed of >2/3 Black or Latino patients. In contrast, 36 percent of White beneficiaries, 3 percent of Black beneficiaries, and less than 2 percent of Latino beneficiaries visit providers that have panels with <1/3 Black or Latino patients.
In the first main analysis, we estimated a random intercepts model of antidepressant prescription to assess the overall intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). The ICC indicates that provider‐level variation contributed 12 percent of the total variance in antidepressant prescribing compared to a contribution of 44 percent at the patient level, after conditioning on the race/ethnicity and time variables (Table 2). In the second main analysis, likelihood ratio tests for models that sequentially added provider‐level random effects (indicators of race, slope, and interactions between race and slope and change in slope) demonstrate that there is significant improvement in model fit as provider random effects on the Black race variable are added (Table 2; only Black interactions were reported for simplicity). The sequential likelihood ratio tests demonstrate that there continues to be significant improvement in model fit and thereby significant variation by provider underlying the differential box warning effect on Blacks over time.
Table 2.
Provider‐level random intercepts model, intraclass correlation, conditional on race, time, and race*time interactions | ||
---|---|---|
Intraclass correlation at provider level | 0.121 | |
Intraclass correlation at patient level | 0.438 | |
Residual share in total variance | 0.441 |
Likelihood ratio tests | LR χ2 | P‐value |
---|---|---|
Adding provider‐level random effect on Black race covariate | 821.25 | <0.0001 |
Adding provider‐level random effect on pre‐bw slope covariate | 13 724.06 | <0.0001 |
Adding provider‐level random effect on Black race*pre‐BW slope covariate | 524.39 | <0.0001 |
Adding provider‐level random effect on level shift covariate | 3967.91 | <0.0001 |
Adding provider‐level random effect on Black race*level shift covariate | 29.25 | <0.0001 |
Adding provider‐level random effect on change in slope covariate | 9660.12 | <0.0001 |
Adding provider‐level random effect on Black race*change in slope covariate | 1774.05 | <0.0001 |
Data: Medicaid analytic eXtract for NY, CA, NC, and FL (n = 7 026 029 medical claims for 1 228 596 beneficiaries).
Results in the third main analysis show that providers with >2/3 minority patients prescribed antidepressants at a lower rate than providers whose share of minority patients was less than 1/3 (Table 3). Consistent with our hypothesis, the interaction coefficients of the post–box warning slope change and “provider with >2/3 minority patients” were significantly positive, indicating that there were smaller rates of decline in antidepressant prescribing among providers with >2/3 minority patients after the box warning compared to providers with panels that had less than 1/3 minority patients.
Table 3.
Coefficient | SE | |
---|---|---|
Racial/ethnic composition of provider panel | ||
<1/3 Black or Latino youth patients | Referent | |
Between 1/3 and 2/3 Black or Latino youth patients | −0.00410** | 0.00049 |
>2/3 Black or Latino youth patients | −0.00914** | 0.00040 |
Time main effects and time*provider panel interactions | ||
Pre‐BW Slope | 0.00005** | 0.00002 |
Interaction with panel between 1/3 and 2/3 Black or Latino youth patients | 0.00004** | 0.00002 |
Interaction with Panel >2/3 Black or Latino youth patients | −0.00001 | 0.00002 |
2004 Post‐BW Level Shift | −0.00113** | 0.00047 |
Interaction with Panel Between 1/3 and 2/3 Black or Latino youth patients | −0.00165** | 0.00060 |
Interaction with Panel >2/3 Black or Latino youth patients | 0.00018 | 0.00051 |
Pre‐BW to Post‐BW Slope Change | −0.00010** | 0.00002 |
Interaction with Panel Between 1/3 and 2/3 Black or Latino youth patients | 0.000003 | 0.00003 |
Interaction with Panel >2/3 Black or Latino youth patients | 0.00007** | 0.00002 |
Constant | 0.01181** | 0.00036 |
Provider‐level random effects | ||
Intercept (SD) | 0.00060** | 0.00001 |
Patient‐level random effects | ||
Intercept (SD) | 0.00217** | 0.000003 |
Error residuals | 0.00218** | 0.000001 |
Note: The unit of observation is patient‐month.
Data: 2002‐2006 Medicaid analytic eXtract for NY, CA, NC, and FL (n = 7 026 029 medical claims for 1 228 596 beneficiaries).
**Significant at the P < 0.05 level.
4. DISCUSSION
This study is the first of which we are aware to assess provider‐ and patient‐level variation in the impact of a health care policy change on racial/ethnic treatment disparities. Future studies can consider use of these methods to identify levels or pathways by which other health care policies impact disparities in treatment. More specifically, we assessed the influence of provider‐level and individual‐level factors on racial/ethnic disparities in antidepressant use before and after the FDA box warning.
Similar to prior studies in the general population7 and among Medicaid beneficiaries,8 we found that overall antidepressant prescriptions declined significantly after the box warning among youth Medicaid beneficiaries in four states. Like prior studies, we identified a reduction in racial/ethnic differences in antidepressant use after the box warning because the decline in Whites was sharper than in Blacks and Latinos. This study builds upon these prior studies by using multilevel modeling, as opposed to uni‐level difference‐in‐difference and interrupted time series methods used in prior studies, allowing us to better understand the provider‐ and patient‐level contributions to the box warning impact on racial/ethnic disparities. This modeling strategy leads to three novel findings: (a) A significant amount of variance in prescribing patterns (as calculated by the ICC) was explained at the provider level, after conditioning on race, time, and race‐time interactions; (b) significant unexplained provider‐level variation related to the differential patterns in antidepressant usage by patient race/ethnicity both before and after the box warning (tested by sequential LR tests); and (c) antidepressant prescribing rates of providers with a large proportion of minority patients declined more slowly than the rates of providers with a smaller proportion of minority patients.
The unexplained provider‐level variation in our first model suggests that providers significantly affected the changes in antidepressant use after the box warning; however, several assumptions are required to equate provider variation with provider influence, including the critical assumption that physicians that had an effect on the shift were also responsible for changes in overall trends in antidepressant use. Alternatively, the strong influence by providers on the shift in antidepressant use could be due to the fact that patients of each provider were clustered among a small group of communities or neighborhoods with distinct attitudes concerning antidepressant use. In that scenario, the uniqueness of the composition of patients within providers’ panels, as opposed to the influence of the provider on those patients, explains our findings. We know of no prior studies describing significant regional or neighborhood differences among racial/ethnic minority patients in medication use, but we cannot rule out this possibility.
Racial/ethnic minority youth Medicaid beneficiaries receive treatment from a subgroup of providers that are different in terms of their panel composition than the subgroup of providers that treat White youth Medicaid beneficiaries, with 72 percent of Blacks, and 87 percent of Latinos receiving care from providers that have panels composed of >2/3 Black or Latino patients, compared to only 30 percent of Whites. This finding mirrors that of prior studies finding that differences in quality of care between racial/ethnic minority and White adult patients are to a large extent due to the fact that minority patients are treated by different groups of physicians11 and in different inpatient hospital settings.29 One implication is that policy makers concerned with equitable diffusion of innovation (or “exnovation”30 in the case of scaling back existing practices because of risk warnings) should consider interventions that intentionally reach out to providers that predominantly treat racial/ethnic minority patients. Furthermore, this provides evidence that de facto segregation across hospitals (due in part to differential physician referral practices and historical catchment areas that mirror residential segregation)31, 32 may extend to outpatient pediatric settings where psychotropic medications are prescribed.
The significant underlying provider‐level variation in prescribing patterns both before and after the box warning suggests that policies seeking equity in diffusion of innovation and risk warnings will need to target resources toward the outpatient facilities and community health centers that predominantly treat youth of color.
The fact that there also remains significant individual‐level variation in prescribing patterns suggests that there should be policies put into place that reduce potentially biased treatment patterns within these facilities and increase direct outreach and education to patients and their caregivers on the costs and benefits of new and high‐risk treatments. Future studies may benefit from exploring variation by provider type (eg, primary care physicians, psychiatrists, nurse practitioners); unfortunately, the MAX data used in this study do not contain National Physician Identification Numbers for the majority of the claims, making it impossible to link our analytical dataset with other datasets with physician specialty information.33
The delicate balance of risks and benefits of antidepressants (and other psychotropic medications) complicate the implications from our findings. Although there is a robust body of evidence demonstrating the effectiveness of psychotropic medication in the treatment of mood, psychotic, anxiety, developmental, and behavioral disorders,34 psychotropic medications can cause severe side effects, particularly SSRIs prescribed to young patients.35, 36 Therefore, the net clinical effect of reduced use of these medications (and a reduction in racial/ethnic differences in antidepressant use) in response to the box warning is not obvious, especially when baseline utilization levels vary across groups. That patients and their families do contribute significantly to decision making is notable and perhaps attributable to the fact that patients and families were very likely exposed to the significant coverage related to the box warning in news outlets and in the popular press.21
We offer evidence that providers contribute to larger shifts in prescribing antidepressants for Whites as compared to Black and Latino patients, in relative and absolute terms, as differences in the speed of risk diffusion varied by the racial/ethnic composition of the patient panel of providers. The reaction to the box warning was slower among providers with more than 2/3 minority patients compared with providers with panels of predominantly White patients. This result is consistent with prior studies showing that providers of racial/ethnic minority patients are less likely to be influenced by the research findings of the FDA and other organizations than providers of White patients.37 These findings also echo prior studies in the adult patient literature demonstrating that providers serving predominantly minority patients provide potentially lower quality of care than providers serving predominantly White patients.11, 12, 13 Additionally, the family and individual preferences of racial/ethnic minorities to prefer talk therapy over antidepressants,17 poorer communication between clinicians and their racial/ethnic minority patients, and statistical discrimination toward minority patients38, 39 may play important roles in the differential influence of providers.
In conclusion, this study identified that the reduction in racial/ethnic differences in antidepressant use after the box warning (caused by the decline among White youth and steady rates among Blacks and Latinos) was in large part explained by the fact that racial/ethnic minority youth largely seek care from a different subset of providers than White youth and that minority‐serving providers reacted differently to the box warning. As rates of psychotropic medication use in youth continue to climb in the United States,40 information about the long‐term risks of these medications has emerged eg,41, 42 and will continue to challenge decision making for providers, youth living with mental illness, and their caregivers. Going forward, policy makers and prescribers should pay close attention to how these risk warnings are disseminated and the differential practice patterns of providers of youth of color, and target resources and provider education to lower the risk of adverse health outcomes faced by these vulnerable patient populations.
Supporting information
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Joint Acknowledgment/Disclosure Statement: This research was supported by grants ME‐1507‐31469 (PI Cook) and R01HS021486 (PI Cook) from the Patient‐Centered Outcomes Research Institute and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
Cook BL, Wang Y, Sonik R, et al. Assessing provider and racial/ethnic variation in response to the FDA antidepressant box warning. Health Serv Res. 2019;54:255‐262. 10.1111/1475-6773.13104
[The copyright line in this article was changed on 10 January 2019 after online publication.]
ENDNOTE
We choose to use difference as opposed to disparity when discussing racial/ethnic differences in antidepressant use in order to remain agnostic about the value of an increase or decrease in antidepressant use. While there is some debate over the risks and benefits of the box warning and changes in antidepressant use, we are concerned in this study with the influence of the warning on provider and patient behavior as opposed to assessing whether the warning was beneficial or not.
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