Center for Innovation to Implementation (Ci2i), VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Menlo Park, CA, USA.
Health Economics Resource Center (HERC), VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Menlo Park, CA, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2019 Apr;34(4):598-603. doi: 10.1007/s11606-018-4810-2. Epub 2019 Jan 25.
The Veterans Access, Choice and Accountability Act (hereafter, Choice Program) seeks to improve access to care by enabling eligible Veterans to receive care from community providers. Veterans Affairs (VA) primary care providers (PCPs) play a key role in making referrals to community specialists, but their frontline experiences with referrals are not well understood.
To understand VA PCPs' experiences referring patients to community specialists while VA works to expand and refine the implementation of the Choice Program.
Qualitative study using interview methods.
Semi-structured telephone interviews were conducted with VA primary care providers (N = 72 out of 599 contacted) recruited nationally.
Open-ended interview questions elicited PCP perceptions and experiences with referrals to community specialists via the Choice Program. Keywords were identified using automated coding features in ATLAS.ti and evaluated using conventional content analysis to inductively describe the qualitative data.
VA PCPs emphasized problems with care coordination and continuity between the VA and community specialists (e.g., "It is extremely difficult for us to obtain and continue continuity of care because there's not much communication with the community specialist"). They described difficulties with tracking the initial referral, coordinating care after receiving community specialty care, accessing community medical records, and aligning community specialists' prescriptions with the VA formulary.
The VA Choice Program provides access to community specialists for VA patients; however, VA primary care providers face challenges tracking referrals to community specialists and in coordinating care. Strategies to improve care coordination between the VA and community providers should focus on providing PCPs with information to follow Veterans throughout the Choice referral process and follow-up.
《退伍军人选择和问责法案》(以下简称“选择计划”)旨在通过使符合条件的退伍军人能够从社区提供者那里获得护理来改善获得护理的机会。退伍军人事务部(VA)初级保健提供者(PCP)在向社区专家转诊方面发挥着关键作用,但他们在转诊方面的一线经验却鲜为人知。
了解 VA PCP 在 VA 努力扩大和完善选择计划实施的过程中向社区专家转诊患者的经验。
使用访谈方法的定性研究。
从全国范围内招募的 VA 初级保健提供者(599 名联系人中的 72 名)进行了半结构式电话访谈。
使用开放式访谈问题引出 PCP 对通过选择计划向社区专家转诊的看法和经验。使用 ATLAS.ti 的自动编码功能识别关键字,并使用常规内容分析对其进行评估,以归纳描述定性数据。
VA PCP 强调 VA 和社区专家之间的护理协调和连续性问题(例如,“我们非常难以获得并保持连续性护理,因为与社区专家的沟通很少”)。他们描述了在跟踪初始转诊、在接受社区专业护理后协调护理、获取社区病历以及使社区专家的处方与 VA 处方集保持一致方面的困难。
VA 选择计划为 VA 患者提供了获得社区专家的机会;然而,VA 初级保健提供者在跟踪向社区专家的转诊和协调护理方面面临挑战。改善 VA 和社区提供者之间的护理协调的策略应侧重于为 PCP 提供信息,以便在整个选择转诊过程和随访过程中跟踪退伍军人。