Background: With rapid acceleration of Veterans? use of care in the community, limited data exist to prepare community providers and others in the broader VA integrated care network. Many community providers and health plans may assume Veteran patients are similar to their routine practice populations, composed primarily of civilians, although prior research would suggest otherwise. Significance/Impact: The proposed study will use detailed, current, and comprehensive data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), the National Surveys on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), and VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW) to quantify broadly the distribution of health and healthcare factors for Veterans, VA users, and VA non-users and to evaluate in-depth the factors that differ between Veterans and civilians. This information will not only substantially update our knowledge of how Veterans are similar to or different from civilians but will also be used by VA policymakers to improve the design and readiness of community care partners as VA referrals increase. Innovation: In contrast to previous studies and reports using national survey data, the proposed project will include VA data to provide a richer description of VA patients than is possible using only publicly-available data on VA users, and examine in depth the patterns in Veterans? health and healthcare across subgroups and over time. The proposed research has no corollary or antecedent study in VA HSR&D?s or QUERI?s portfolio, and of the studies funded outside the VA that use one or more of these sources and is underway or recently completed, none proposed to use VA data or to combine the breadth and depth of the proposed project Specific Aims: This project aims to 1. Quantify the distribution of population characteristics, health behaviors, health conditions, health status, access to care, and healthcare utilization among Veterans overall and among VA users and non-users; 2. Evaluate the extent to which patterns in population-, health-, and healthcare- related factors differ between Veterans and civilians; 3. Determine whether the patterns identified under Aims 1 and 2 vary for subgroups defined by age, gender, and race-ethnicity; and, 4. Conduct an expert panel to review results from Aims 1-3 to come to consensus on evidence-based recommendations for improved community care (e.g., community provider readiness) and health equity. Methodology: We will conduct a secondary analysis using multiple years of data from BRFSS, NHIS, NSDUH, and VA CDW. Our analyses will include measures for Veteran and VA user status, geographic region, population characteristics, health behaviors and conditions, and healthcare outcomes, such as access, utilization, and unmet need for care. We will quantify the distribution of population-, health-, and healthcare- related factors among Veterans, VA users, and VA non-users, evaluate how these factors differ between Veterans and civilians, assess the extent to which VA use moderates differences between Veterans and civilians, and assess how patterns for Veterans differ across population subgroups. We will use modified Delphi panel methods to critically appraise findings, rate their importance, feasibility, and potential for Veteran impacts, and come to consensus on evidence-based recommendations for community care and health equity. Next Steps/Implementation: We will engage diverse stakeholders as advisors/panelists (e.g., national program office, VISN, VAMC and Veteran representatives) in design of dissemination products (e.g., fact sheets, visual abstracts) for different venues that meet end user needs in addition to traditional scientific products. Integrated into the panel process will be explicit planning for products capable of informing and supporting potential practice and policy changes and their subsequent implementation.

Public Health Relevance

Building a high-performing, integrated network of care is part of VA?s efforts to provide greater choice for Veterans. VA?s Office of Community Care has been developing measures to ensure Veterans have adequate access to providers in the community, but little has been done to better understand the healthcare needs and current access to healthcare for Veterans in those communities. Current efforts to engage Veterans in the community with VA care have neglected, when postulating demand or anticipating the need for healthcare services, to incorporate information on differences in health risk factors, the prevalence of health conditions, comorbidity levels, and current access to care between Veterans and civilians and VA users and non-users. This work will fill these gaps in our understanding of health and healthcare for Veterans in the US general population, including VA non-users. This information can be used by community providers, policymakers, and other VA and non-VA stakeholders to improve how Veterans are able to access care in their communities.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Veterans Affairs (VA)
Type
Non-HHS Research Projects (I01)
Project #
1I01HX002611-01A2
Application #
9949399
Study Section
HSR-2 Determinants of Patient Response to Care (HSR2)
Project Start
2020-10-01
Project End
2022-09-30
Budget Start
2020-10-01
Budget End
2021-09-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System
Department
Type
DUNS #
066689118
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90073