Yoon Jean, Wong Emily P, Weber Jillian J, Blonigen Daniel M, Tsai Jack
Health Economics Resource Center, VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Menlo Park, CA, USA.
Center for Innovation to Implementation, VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Menlo Park, CA, USA.
Public Health Rep. 2025 Sep 7:333549251365173. doi: 10.1177/00333549251365173.
Mobile medical units (MMUs) provide health care services in the community to reach populations with geographic, financial, and other barriers to care. The US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Homeless Patient Aligned Care Team (HPACT) program deployed MMUs to 25 sites in fiscal year 2024 to increase access for veterans experiencing homelessness. We examined early implementation of MMUs in HPACT sites by describing implementation and operational issues, services provided, and characteristics of veterans who used MMUs.
To examine the implementation of MMUs on veterans experiencing homelessness, we conducted a mixed-methods study using an online survey and health care administrative data. Measures included MMU implementation time, staffing type, services, safety measures, maintenance costs, and characteristics of veterans using and not using MMUs. We examined differences between veterans who used MMUs and those who did not.
Seventeen of 25 sites responded to the survey; MMU implementation occurred during a mean of 147 hours in 5 months. Most sites (15 of 17) visited housing sites and homeless shelters in community- and VA-supported programs to provide health screenings, education, and medication administration and prescribing. Operating costs varied widely for vehicle maintenance and gas and medical and telehealth equipment. Veterans who used MMUs (vs did not use MMUs) had more medical comorbidities (Elixhauser score of 3.4 vs 2.8), were more likely to have substance use disorder (49.9% vs 39.1%), and had higher baseline levels of health care use, especially emergency department visits (0.4 vs 0.3 visits per quarter).
Evidence on the effects of MMUs on patient engagement with primary and mental health care and acute care use is needed to inform decisions to implement MMUs.
移动医疗单位(MMUs)在社区提供医疗服务,以惠及那些在地理、经济和其他方面存在就医障碍的人群。美国退伍军人事务部(VA)的无家可归患者协调护理团队(HPACT)项目在2024财年向25个地点部署了移动医疗单位,以增加无家可归退伍军人获得医疗服务的机会。我们通过描述实施和运营问题、提供的服务以及使用移动医疗单位的退伍军人的特征,来研究HPACT项目地点移动医疗单位的早期实施情况。
为了研究移动医疗单位在无家可归退伍军人中的实施情况,我们采用在线调查和医疗管理数据进行了一项混合方法研究。测量指标包括移动医疗单位的实施时间、人员配置类型、服务、安全措施、维护成本以及使用和未使用移动医疗单位的退伍军人的特征。我们研究了使用移动医疗单位的退伍军人与未使用的退伍军人之间的差异。
25个地点中有17个回复了调查;移动医疗单位的实施平均在5个月内用时147小时。大多数地点(17个中的15个)走访了社区和退伍军人事务部支持项目中的住房地点和无家可归者收容所,以提供健康筛查、教育以及药物管理和开方服务。车辆维护、汽油以及医疗和远程医疗设备的运营成本差异很大。使用移动医疗单位(与未使用移动医疗单位相比)的退伍军人有更多的医疗合并症(埃利克斯豪泽评分分别为3.4和2.8),更有可能患有物质使用障碍(49.9%对39.1%),并且有更高的医疗保健使用基线水平,尤其是急诊就诊次数(每季度0.4次对0.3次)。
需要有关移动医疗单位对患者参与初级和心理健康护理以及急性护理使用的影响的证据,以为实施移动医疗单位的决策提供参考。