Zheng David X, Cwalina Thomas B, Friedl Sophia L, Jella Tarun K, Bullock Taylor A, Xiang Laura, Levoska Melissa A
Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Division of General Internal Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York, USA.
Arch Dermatol Res. 2025 Jan 6;317(1):173. doi: 10.1007/s00403-024-03678-7.
Trends in outpatient dermatology appointment wait times for United States (US) veterans are poorly characterized. Given concerns surrounding prolonged wait times at Veterans Health Administration (VHA) medical facilities, the federal government introduced the Maintaining Internal Systems and Strengthening Outside Networks (MISSION) Act in 2018, allowing veterans to receive VHA-reimbursed community care if VHA specialty care appointments cannot be scheduled within 28 days. Considering this expanded access to community care, we characterized among US veterans the (1) overall demand for dermatology appointments, (2) trends in average wait times, and (3) facility/geographic variation in wait times. The VHA Corporate Data Warehouse was queried for all dermatology appointments from January 1, 2014 to June 30, 2021. Appointment wait time, defined as time from appointment request to completion, was calculated for each care setting: VHA, community, and overall. Linear regression was used to assess average annual changes in wait times, and t-tests were used to compare mean wait times before and after the MISSION Act's implementation in 2018. Median wait times for each facility and state, and the proportion in each category meeting the MISSION Act goal wait time < 28 days, were determined using 2021 data. Our analytic cohort comprised 1,613,262 dermatology appointments directed through 130 VHA facilities. There was a 356% increase in demand for dermatology appointments from 2014 to 2019 (from 85,593 to 296,140 overall visits), with a corresponding 435% increase in demand for community appointments from 2014 to 2020 (from 11.7 to 50.9% of annual visits). Overall appointment wait times increased by an average 0.88 days annually, with community wait times increasing by an annual average of 1.09 days and VHA wait times decreasing by an annual average of 1.01 days (all P < 0.001). In 2021, 35% of VHA facilities and 20% of states had a median appointment wait time < 28 days. We observed an increase in demand over time for outpatient dermatology appointments among US veterans. Appointment wait times increased overall and in community settings, though decreased at VHA facilities. Understanding trends in appointment wait times will help refine policies aimed at increasing dermatologic care access for US veterans.
美国退伍军人门诊皮肤科预约等待时间的趋势特征尚不明确。鉴于对退伍军人健康管理局(VHA)医疗机构长时间等待时间的担忧,联邦政府于2018年出台了《维持内部系统和加强外部网络(MISSION)法案》,规定如果VHA专科护理预约无法在28天内安排,退伍军人可接受VHA报销的社区护理。考虑到社区护理的可及性增加,我们对美国退伍军人的以下方面进行了特征描述:(1)皮肤科预约的总体需求;(2)平均等待时间的趋势;(3)等待时间的机构/地理差异。我们查询了VHA企业数据仓库中2014年1月1日至2021年6月30日期间的所有皮肤科预约。预约等待时间定义为从预约请求到完成的时间,针对每种护理环境(VHA、社区和总体)进行计算。使用线性回归评估等待时间的年均变化,并使用t检验比较2018年《MISSION法案》实施前后的平均等待时间。利用2021年的数据确定了每个机构和州的中位等待时间,以及每个类别中符合《MISSION法案》目标等待时间<28天的比例。我们的分析队列包括通过130个VHA机构进行的1,613,262次皮肤科预约。2014年至2019年,皮肤科预约需求增长了356%(从85,593次总就诊增加到296,140次),2014年至2020年社区预约需求相应增长了435%(从年度就诊的11.7%增加到50.9%)。总体预约等待时间每年平均增加0.88天,社区等待时间每年平均增加1.09天,VHA等待时间每年平均减少1.01天(所有P<0.001)。2021年,35%的VHA机构和20%的州中位预约等待时间<28天。我们观察到美国退伍军人门诊皮肤科预约需求随时间增加。预约等待时间总体上和在社区环境中有所增加,尽管在VHA机构有所减少。了解预约等待时间的趋势将有助于完善旨在增加美国退伍军人皮肤科护理可及性的政策。