A number of studies describe physical or mental conditions among OEF-OIF veterans. It is becoming clear, however, that many veterans have multiple conditions concomitantly which increases the complexity of their treatment. The growing body of research on OEF-OIF veterans suggests that there are patterns of comorbid conditions that cluster together. The VA HSR&D funded a Traumatic Brain Injury State of the Art Conference (TBI SOTA) in May, 2008 that highlighted gaps in our current knowledge and recognized that a systematic identification of common clusters of comorbidities (hereafter comorbidity clusters) is needed to understand the long-term comorbidity patterns and project the health care needs of this veteran cohort, particularly those with TBI. OBJECTIVES: Objective 1. Identify comorbidity clusters among OEF-OIF veterans at baseline and describe patterns of comorbidity trajectories (stable vs. deterioration) over 3 years. Objective 2. Identify risk factors for trajectories of deterioration vs. stability. Objective 3. Compare VA health care utilization for individuals with stable comorbidity trajectories vs. those who exhibit patterns of deterioration. Objective 4. Examine differences in resilient coping, social support and measures of mental health for OEF-OIF VA patients in each comorbidity trajectory (stable or deterioration) in a random sample stratified to represent trajectories within each initial comorbidity cluster. METHODS: This is a prevalent cohort study that will combine data from VA national data repositories (Austin, Pharmacy Benefits Management database, TBI screening database, OEF-OIF database), primary data collection (survey) and national VistA Web chart abstraction to accomplish our objectives. This study will identify initial comorbidity clusters for individuals first seen in VA care (FY02-08). We will then use latent class analysis in conjunction with expert clinical opinion to identify comorbidity trajectories of stablility or deterioration within each comorbidity cluster. We will validate comorbidity clusters by examining the relationship between combat-related exposures and symptoms, and by comparing utilization among individuals with stable and deterioration comorbidity trajectories within each comorbidity cluster. We will then identify a random sample of individuals stratified by initial comorbidity cluster and trajectory to conduct more comprehensive examination using survey and chart abstraction data. Using a Modified Dillman approach, we will obtain survey data from approximately 2,000 OEF-OIF VA patients. Surveys will measure mental health symptoms, coping strategies, social support, structural aspects of relationships, and employment status. We will obtain data from pre- and post-deployment health assessments/ re-assessments (PDHRA) in addition to smoking history, family history of chronic disease, and other relevant clinical variables via VistA Web chart abstraction. The PDHRA will provide baseline information on self-reported health, relationship concerns, and mental health screening instruments. We will use descriptive and bivariate statistics to examine the relationships among self-reported resilient coping strategies, social support, depression severity and comorbidity trajectory, controlling for pre-and post-deployment initial self-reported health and deployment concerns. Generalized linear mixed effects modeling will be conducted to examine the associations between comorbidity trajectory and resilient coping, social support, and measures of mental health.
This project establishes a line of inquiry examining patterns and trajectories of comorbidity, risk factors, and patient outcomes in OEF-OIF VA patients using a team comprised of VA, Army, Air Force, and Navy investigators. Identification of comorbidity clusters and their trajectories will provide insight for clinicians and policy makers to project future population characteristics and resource needs, and determine how VA health care resources should be organized and delivered for this cohort of veterans. Examination of the relationship between coping patterns, social support and comorbidity trajectories may provide the opportunity to develop interventions aimed at improving coping, social integration and support. In both cases, such interventions offer the promise of utilizing health promotion to augment clinical care in line with VA goals for patient- centered care.
Jaramillo, Carlos A; Cooper, Douglas B; Wang, Chen-Pin et al. (2015) Subgroups of US IRAQ and Afghanistan veterans: associations with traumatic brain injury and mental health conditions. Brain Imaging Behav 9:445-55 |
Pugh, Mary Jo V; Finley, Erin P; Copeland, Laurel A et al. (2014) Complex comorbidity clusters in OEF/OIF veterans: the polytrauma clinical triad and beyond. Med Care 52:172-81 |
Norman, RocĂo S; Jaramillo, Carlos A; Amuan, Megan et al. (2013) Traumatic brain injury in veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan: communication disorders stratified by severity of brain injury. Brain Inj 27:1623-30 |
Orman, Jean A; Geyer, Dennis; Jones, John et al. (2012) Epidemiology of moderate-to-severe penetrating versus closed traumatic brain injury in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. J Trauma Acute Care Surg 73:S496-502 |