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Importance: Since 2014, when Congress passed the Veterans Access Choice and Accountability (Choice) Act (replaced in 2018 with the more comprehensive Maintaining Internal Systems and Strengthening Integrated Outside Networks [MISSION] Act), the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has been paying for US veterans to receive increasing amounts of care in the private sector (non-VA care or VA community care). However, little is known about the implications of these legislative changes for the VA system.
Objective: To describe the implications for the VA system of recent increases in VA-financed non-VA care.
Design, Setting, And Participants: This qualitative study was a thematic analysis of documentation in the electronic health records (EHRs) of a random sample of US veterans with advanced kidney disease between June 6, 2019, and February 5, 2021.
Exposures: Mentions of community care in participant EHRs.
Main Outcomes And Measures: Dominant themes pertaining to VA-financed non-VA care.
Results: Among 1000 study participants, the mean (SD) age was 73.8 (11.4) years, and 957 participants (95.7%) were male. Three interrelated themes pertaining to VA-financed non-VA care emerged from qualitative analysis of documentation in cohort member EHRs: (1) VA as mothership, which describes extensive care coordination by VA staff members and clinicians to facilitate care outside the VA and the tendency of veterans and their non-VA clinicians to rely on the VA to fill gaps in this care; (2) hidden work of veterans, which describes the efforts of veterans and their family members to navigate the referral process, and to serve as intermediaries between VA and non-VA clinicians; and (3) strain on the VA system, which describes a challenging referral process and the ways in which cross-system care has stretched the traditional roles of VA staff and clinicians and interfered with VA care processes.
Conclusions And Relevance: The findings of this qualitative study describing VA-financed non-VA care for veterans with advanced kidney disease spotlight the substantial challenges of cross-system use and the strain placed on the VA system, VA staff and clinicians, and veterans and their families in recent years. These difficult-to-measure consequences of cross-system care should be considered when budgeting, evaluating, and planning the provision of VA-financed non-VA care in the private sector.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9112136 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamainternmed.2022.1379 | DOI Listing |
JAMA Intern Med
July 2022
Center of Innovation for Veteran-Centered and Value-Driven Care, VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System, Denver.
Importance: Since 2014, when Congress passed the Veterans Access Choice and Accountability (Choice) Act (replaced in 2018 with the more comprehensive Maintaining Internal Systems and Strengthening Integrated Outside Networks [MISSION] Act), the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has been paying for US veterans to receive increasing amounts of care in the private sector (non-VA care or VA community care). However, little is known about the implications of these legislative changes for the VA system.
Objective: To describe the implications for the VA system of recent increases in VA-financed non-VA care.
Clin J Am Soc Nephrol
November 2020
Center of Innovation for Long Term Services and Supports, Providence Veterans Affairs Health Care System, Providence, Rhode Island.
Background And Objectives: Because of the limited capacity of its own dialysis facilities, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Veterans Health Administration routinely outsources dialysis care to community providers. Prior to 2011-when the VA implemented a process of standardizing payments and establishing national contracts for community-based dialysis care-payments to community providers were largely unregulated. This study examined the association of changes in the Department of Veterans Affairs payment policy for community dialysis with temporal trends in VA spending and veterans' access to dialysis care and mortality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Serv Res
December 2018
Providence VA Medical Center, Providence, RI.
Objective: To examine the association between reliance on VA outpatient care and hospital admissions among Medicare-eligible Veterans enrolled in the Homeless Patient Aligned Care Team (H-PACT).
Data Sources/study Setting: Registry of H-PACT enrollees linked to VA and Medicare utilization data for 2013.
Study Design: After assigning Veterans to two groups according to whether they received >90 percent of outpatient care in VA (higher reliance) or <90 percent of outpatient care in VA (lower reliance), generalized linear models with inverse probability of treatment weights were used to estimate the association of reliance with Medicare and VA-financed hospital admissions.