Distress and Deaths of Despair in the U.S. Healthcare Delivery System: Understanding Patterns in Healthcare among Distressed Americans

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2024

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The United States has experienced rising mortality rates for the past several decades. Drug poisonings have increased nearly five-fold, suicide rates by nearly 40%, and by nearly 30% percent for alcohol-induced deaths between 1999 and 2021. This collection of drug-, alcohol- and suicide deaths are oftentimes referred to as “deaths of despair”, first coined by economists Anne Case and Angus Deaton who cited health and socioeconomic disparities driving Americans into mental distress, depression, and anxiety. The impact on the mental health of Americans was further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic; this exposed vulnerabilities in the mental healthcare system as well as the various stressors that negatively impacted individuals across the globe. Using nationally representative data, this dissertation delves into the deaths of despair phenomenon using a multidisciplinary health services research lens. Access, utilization, and risk from deaths of despair are examined by using psychological distress (which is treated as a proxy for despair in the first two aims). Using the Kessler-6 scale, a well-accepted and clinically valid tool for non-specific mental distress, this dissertation explores patterns of healthcare spending among those with varying severity levels of psychological distress over a two-decade period; delves into patterns of healthcare utilization among young adults aged 18-30 (a population disproportionately impacted by stressors during the COVID-19 pandemic) by psychological distress; and quantifies the risk of death among those with varying severity levels of psychological distress.

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