Oregon Rural Practice-Based Research Network, Oregon Health & Science University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Rd, Mail Code: L222, Portland, OR, 97239, USA.
OCHIN, Inc., Portland, OR, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2023 Jul;38(Suppl 3):821-828. doi: 10.1007/s11606-023-08126-2. Epub 2023 Jun 20.
The 2019 VA Maintaining Systems and Strengthening Integrated Outside Networks Act, or MISSION Act, aimed to improve rural veteran access to care by expanding coverage for services in the community. Increased access to clinicians outside the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) could benefit rural veterans, who often face obstacles obtaining VA care. This solution, however, relies on clinics willing to navigate VA administrative processes.
To investigate the experiences rural, non-VA clinicians and staff have while providing care to rural veterans and inform challenges and opportunities for high-quality, equitable care access and delivery.
Phenomenological qualitative study.
Non-VA-affiliated primary care clinicians and staff in the Pacific Northwest.
Semi-structured interviews with a purposive sample of eligible clinicians and staff between May and August 2020; data analyzed using thematic analysis.
We interviewed 13 clinicians and staff and identified four themes and multiple challenges related to providing care for rural veterans: (1) Confusion, variability and delays for VA administrative processes, (2) clarifying responsibility for dual-user veteran care, (3) accessing and sharing medical records outside the VA, and (4) negotiating communication pathways between systems and clinicians. Informants reported using workarounds to combat challenges, including using trial and error to gain expertise in VA system navigation, relying on veterans to act as intermediaries to coordinate their care, and depending on individual VA employees to support provider-to-provider communication and share system knowledge. Informants expressed concerns that dual-user veterans were more likely to have duplication or gaps in services.
Findings highlight the need to reduce the bureaucratic burden of interacting with the VA. Further work is needed to tailor structures to address challenges rural community providers experience and to identify strategies to reduce care fragmentation across VA and non-VA providers and encourage long-term commitment to care for veterans.
2019 年 VA 维护系统和加强综合外部网络法案(简称 MISSION 法案)旨在通过扩大社区服务覆盖范围来改善农村退伍军人的医疗服务获取机会。增加退伍军人事务部(VA)以外的临床医生的可及性可能会使农村退伍军人受益,因为他们通常在获得 VA 护理方面面临障碍。然而,这一解决方案依赖于愿意了解 VA 行政流程的诊所。
调查农村非 VA 临床医生和工作人员在为农村退伍军人提供护理方面的经验,为高质量、公平的医疗服务获取和提供方面的挑战和机遇提供信息。
现象学定性研究。
太平洋西北地区非 VA 附属的初级保健临床医生和工作人员。
对符合条件的临床医生和工作人员进行半结构式访谈,访谈时间为 2020 年 5 月至 8 月;使用主题分析对数据进行分析。
我们采访了 13 名临床医生和工作人员,确定了四个主题和与为农村退伍军人提供护理相关的多个挑战:(1)VA 行政流程的混乱、多变和延迟,(2)明确双重用户退伍军人护理的责任,(3)获取和共享 VA 以外的医疗记录,(4)协商系统和临床医生之间的沟通途径。受访者报告说,他们使用了权宜之计来应对挑战,包括通过反复试验来获得 VA 系统导航方面的专业知识,依赖退伍军人作为中间人来协调他们的护理,以及依靠个别 VA 员工来支持提供者之间的沟通和共享系统知识。受访者表示担心双重用户退伍军人更有可能在服务方面存在重复或空白。
研究结果强调需要减轻与 VA 互动的官僚负担。需要进一步努力调整结构,以解决农村社区提供者所面临的挑战,并确定减少 VA 和非 VA 提供者之间的护理碎片化以及鼓励对退伍军人长期承诺护理的策略。