Mental Health Service Use: A Comparison of Treated and Untreated Individuals with Substance Use Disorders in Ontario

Author:

Ross Helen E1,Lin Elizabeth2,Cunningham John3

Affiliation:

1. Scientist, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health; Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry; Lecturer, Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario

2. Research Scientist, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health; Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto; Adjunct Scientist, Institute for Clinical and Evaluative Sciences in Ontario, Toronto, Ontario

3. Scientist, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health; Departments of Psychology and Public Health Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario

Abstract

Objective: To determine the prevalence of and factors associated with mental health service use in the past year among respondents with an alcohol or other drug use disorder in a general population survey of Ontario adults. Method: Data were obtained from the 1990/1991 Mental Health Supplement to the Ontario Health Survey, which used the University of Michigan Composite International Diagnostic Interview (UM-CIDI). The current study examined 436 respondents aged 15–64 years who met Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III-R) criteria for a substance use disorder in the past year. The 82 respondents who used services for a mental health or substance abuse problem during the past year were compared with the 354 nonusers. Illness severity, disability, health beliefs and attitudes, and predisposing or enabling factors were examined in bivariate and logistic regression analyses. Results: Twenty-two percent of respondents used services in the past year. Having concurrent disorders (comorbidity), troubled relationships with others, and dysfunction in main activity, feeling comfortable talking to a professional about mental health problems, being older and an urban resident, not working or being in school, and having a biological parent with an alcohol or drug problem were all associated with service use. Conclusions: The results suggest that individual determinants, such as severity of illness, disability, attitudes, and predisposing or enabling variables, all have a role in predicting service use among individuals in the general population who suffer from alcohol and other drug disorders.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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