Miles Shannon R, Sayer Nina A, Belanger Heather G, Venkatachalam Hari H, Kozel Frank Andrew, Toyinbo Peter A, McCart James A, Luther Stephen L
Mental Health and Behavioral Sciences, James A. Haley Veterans' Hospital, Tampa, Florida, USA.
Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Neurosciences, Morsani College of Medicine, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, USA.
J Neurotrauma. 2023 Jan;40(1-2):102-111. doi: 10.1089/neu.2022.0176. Epub 2022 Aug 26.
The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) screens veterans who deployed in support of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq for traumatic brain injury (TBI) and mental health (MH) disorders. Chronic symptoms after mild TBI overlap with MH symptoms, for which there are already established screens within the VHA. It is unclear whether the TBI screen facilitates treatment for appropriate specialty care over and beyond the MH screens. Our primary objective was to determine whether TBI screening is associated with different types (MH, Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation [PM&R], and Neurology) and frequency of specialty services compared with the MH screens. A retrospective cohort design examined veterans receiving VHA care who were screened for both TBI and MH disorders between Fiscal Year (FY) 2007 and FY 2018 (N = 241,136). We calculated service utilization counts in MH, PM&R, and Neurology in the six months after the screens. Zero-inflated negative binomial regression models of encounters (counts) were fit separately by specialty care type and for a total count of specialty services. We found that screening positive for TBI resulted in 2.38 times more specialty service encounters than screening negative for TBI. Compared with screening positive for MH only, screening positive for both MH and TBI resulted in 1.78 times more specialty service encounters and 1.33 times more MH encounters. The TBI screen appears to increase use of MH, PM&R, and Neurology services for veterans with post-deployment health concerns, even in those also identified as having a possible MH disorder.
退伍军人健康管理局(VHA)对曾部署在阿富汗和伊拉克战争中的退伍军人进行创伤性脑损伤(TBI)和心理健康(MH)障碍筛查。轻度TBI后的慢性症状与MH症状重叠,而VHA内部已经有针对MH症状的既定筛查方法。目前尚不清楚TBI筛查是否有助于在MH筛查之外为适当的专科护理提供治疗。我们的主要目标是确定与MH筛查相比,TBI筛查是否与不同类型(MH、物理医学与康复[PM&R]和神经病学)的专科服务以及专科服务的频率相关。一项回顾性队列研究设计,研究对象为在2007财年至2018财年期间接受VHA护理且同时接受TBI和MH障碍筛查的退伍军人(N = 241,136)。我们计算了筛查后六个月内MH、PM&R和神经病学方面的服务利用次数。针对专科护理类型以及专科服务总次数,分别拟合了零膨胀负二项回归模型(计数)。我们发现,TBI筛查呈阳性的退伍军人的专科服务就诊次数比TBI筛查呈阴性的退伍军人多2.38倍。与仅MH筛查呈阳性相比,MH和TBI筛查均呈阳性的退伍军人的专科服务就诊次数多1.78倍,MH就诊次数多1.33倍。TBI筛查似乎增加了对有部署后健康问题的退伍军人的MH、PM&R和神经病学服务的使用,即使是那些也被确定可能患有MH障碍的退伍军人。