VA Capitol Health Care Network (VISN 5) Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center (MIRECC), VA Maryland Health Care System, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2023 Dec;58(6):1224-1232. doi: 10.1111/1475-6773.14221. Epub 2023 Sep 4.
To identify barriers veterans with bipolar disorder face to accessing chronic pain management services within a Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system.
Veterans (n = 15) with chronic pain and bipolar disorder and providers (n = 15) working within a mid-Atlantic VA health care system. Data were collected from August 2017-June 2018.
Veteran interviews focused on their chronic pain experiences and treatment, including barriers that arose when trying to access pain management services. Provider interviews focused on whether they address chronic pain with veteran patients and, if so, what considerations arise when addressing pain in veterans with bipolar disorder and other serious mental illnesses.
Veterans were at least 18 years old, had a confirmed bipolar disorder and chronic pain diagnosis, and engaged in outpatient care within the VA health care system. Clinicians provided direct care services to veterans within the same VA. Interviews lasted approximately 60 min and were transcribed and analyzed using a rapid analysis protocol.
Four major themes emerged from veteran and provider interviews: siloed care (unintegrated and uncoordinated mental and physical health care), mental health primacy (prioritization of mental health symptoms at expense of physical health symptoms), lagging expectations (unfamiliarity with comprehensive evidence-based pain management options), and provider-patient communication concerns (inefficient communication about pain concerns and treatment options).
Veterans with co-occurring pain and bipolar disorder face unique barriers that compromise equitable access to evidence-based pain treatment. Our findings suggest that educating providers about bipolar disorder and other serious mental illnesses and the benefit of effective non-pharmacological pain interventions for this group may improve care coordination and care quality and reduce access disparities.
确定退伍军人在退伍军人事务部 (VA) 医疗保健系统内获得慢性疼痛管理服务时面临的障碍。
患有慢性疼痛和双相情感障碍的退伍军人(n=15)和在大西洋中部 VA 医疗保健系统内工作的提供者(n=15)。数据于 2017 年 8 月至 2018 年 6 月收集。
退伍军人访谈侧重于他们的慢性疼痛经历和治疗,包括在尝试获得疼痛管理服务时出现的障碍。提供者访谈侧重于他们是否与退伍军人患者一起解决慢性疼痛问题,如果是,在为患有双相情感障碍和其他严重精神疾病的退伍军人解决疼痛问题时会出现哪些考虑因素。
退伍军人年龄至少 18 岁,确诊患有双相情感障碍和慢性疼痛,并在 VA 医疗保健系统内接受门诊护理。临床医生在同一 VA 内向退伍军人提供直接护理服务。访谈持续大约 60 分钟,并使用快速分析协议进行转录和分析。
退伍军人和提供者访谈中出现了四个主要主题:孤立的护理(心理健康和身体健康护理不整合且不协调)、心理健康优先(心理健康症状优先于身体健康症状)、预期滞后(对全面循证疼痛管理选择不熟悉)和提供者-患者沟通问题(对疼痛问题和治疗方案的沟通效率低下)。
患有共病疼痛和双相情感障碍的退伍军人面临独特的障碍,这会影响他们获得循证疼痛治疗的公平性。我们的研究结果表明,教育提供者有关双相情感障碍和其他严重精神疾病以及对该人群有效非药物性疼痛干预措施的益处,可能会改善护理协调、护理质量并减少获得服务的差异。