U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego (Kline, Panza); Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego (Kline, Panza, Nichter, Norman); National Center on Homelessness Among Veterans, VA Central Office, Washington, D.C. (Tsai); School of Public Health, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston (Tsai); VA National Center for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, West Haven, Connecticut (Harpaz-Rotem, Pietrzak), and White River Junction, Vermont (Norman); Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut (Harpaz-Rotem, Pietrzak).
Psychiatr Serv. 2022 Jun;73(6):628-635. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.202100112. Epub 2021 Nov 15.
Psychiatric and substance use disorders are prevalent among U.S. military veterans, yet many veterans do not engage in treatment. The authors examined characteristics associated with use of mental health care in a nationally representative veteran sample.
Using 2019-2020 data from the National Health and Resilience in Veterans Study (N=4,069), the authors examined predisposing, enabling, and need factors and perceived barriers to care as correlates of mental health care utilization (psychotherapy, counseling, or pharmacotherapy). Hierarchical logistic regression and relative importance analyses were used.
Among all veterans, 433 (weighted prevalence, 12%) reported current use of mental health care. Among 924 (26%) veterans with a probable mental or substance use disorder, less than a third (weighted prevalence, 27%) reported care utilization. Mental dysfunction (24%), posttraumatic stress disorder symptom severity (18%), using the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs as primary health care provider (14%), sleep disorder (12%), and grit (i.e., trait perseverance including decision and commitment to address one's needs on one's own; 7%) explained most of the variance in mental health care utilization in this subsample. Grit moderated the relationship between mental dysfunction and use of care; among veterans with high mental dysfunction, those with high grit (23%) were less likely to use services than were those with low grit (53%).
A minority of U.S. veterans engaged in mental health care. Less stigmatized need factors (e.g., functioning and sleep difficulties) may facilitate engagement. The relationship between protective and need factors may help inform understanding of veterans' decision making regarding treatment seeking and outreach efforts.
精神疾病和物质使用障碍在美国退伍军人中普遍存在,但许多退伍军人并不接受治疗。作者研究了一个具有全国代表性的退伍军人样本中与使用心理健康护理相关的特征。
使用 2019-2020 年国家健康与退伍军人韧性研究(N=4069)的数据,作者检查了作为心理健康护理利用(心理治疗、咨询或药物治疗)相关因素的倾向、促成和需求因素以及感知到的护理障碍。使用分层逻辑回归和相对重要性分析。
在所有退伍军人中,有 433 人(加权患病率为 12%)报告目前正在使用心理健康护理。在 924 名(26%)有精神或物质使用障碍的退伍军人中,不到三分之一(加权患病率为 27%)报告了护理利用情况。精神功能障碍(24%)、创伤后应激障碍症状严重程度(18%)、将美国退伍军人事务部作为主要医疗保健提供者(14%)、睡眠障碍(12%)和坚韧(即特质毅力,包括独立决定和承诺满足自己的需求;7%)解释了该亚组中心理健康护理利用的大部分差异。坚韧度调节了精神功能障碍与护理利用之间的关系;在精神功能障碍较高的退伍军人中,坚韧度较高(23%)的人比坚韧度较低(53%)的人更不可能使用服务。
少数美国退伍军人接受了心理健康护理。较少污名化的需求因素(例如,功能和睡眠困难)可能会促进参与。保护因素和需求因素之间的关系可能有助于了解退伍军人在寻求治疗和外展工作方面的决策。