Washington Donna L, Harada Nancy D, Villa Valentine M, Damron-Rodriguez JoAnn, Dhanani Shawkat, Shon Herb, Makinodan Takashi
Department of Medicine, VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, School of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Mil Med. 2002 Mar;167(3):235-41.
Our objective was to describe racial/ethnic variations in Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) ambulatory care use and its association with the presence of unmet health care needs. Using the 1992 National Survey of Veterans, we examined race/ethnicity and unmet health care need for ambulatory care users of VA and non-VA facilities. Black and Hispanic veterans were more likely to report any VA use. In unadjusted analyses, American Indian/Eskimo, Hispanic, and black veterans were 4.4, 2.5, and 1.9 times more likely, respectively, than white veterans to report an inability to get needed care. Adjusting for VA ambulatory care use diminished the disparity in inability to get needed care between American Indian/Eskimo or Hispanic veterans and white veterans and eliminated the disparity between black and white veterans. Our findings support the VA's role as a medical safety net provider and suggest that VA ambulatory care use is effective in mitigating health-related racial disparities for some veterans. Additional facilitators for reducing unmet need should be explored.
我们的目标是描述退伍军人事务部(VA)门诊护理使用情况中的种族/族裔差异,及其与未满足的医疗保健需求之间的关联。利用1992年全国退伍军人调查,我们研究了VA和非VA设施门诊护理使用者的种族/族裔情况以及未满足的医疗保健需求。黑人和西班牙裔退伍军人更有可能报告使用过VA的任何服务。在未经调整的分析中,美国印第安人/爱斯基摩人、西班牙裔和黑人退伍军人报告无法获得所需护理的可能性分别是白人退伍军人的4.4倍、2.5倍和1.9倍。对VA门诊护理使用情况进行调整后,美国印第安人/爱斯基摩人或西班牙裔退伍军人与白人退伍军人在无法获得所需护理方面的差距有所缩小,黑人和白人退伍军人之间的差距则消除了。我们的研究结果支持了VA作为医疗安全网提供者的作用,并表明VA门诊护理的使用在缓解一些退伍军人与健康相关的种族差异方面是有效的。应探索更多减少未满足需求的促进因素。