Patient-aligned Care Team Engagement to Connect Veterans Experiencing Homelessness With Appropriate Health Care.

Med Care

*Informatics, Decision Enhancement, and Analytic Sciences Center, VA Salt Lake City Health Care System †Department of Internal Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT ‡VA National Center on Homelessness Among Veterans, Philadelphia, PA §Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT ∥Providence Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center, Providence, RI ¶Utah State University, Department of Psychology, Logan, UT #Warren Alpert Medical School at Brown University, Providence, RI.

Published: September 2017

Background: Veterans experiencing homelessness frequently use emergency and urgent care (ED).

Objective: To examine the effect of a Patient-aligned Care Team (PACT) model tailored to the unique needs of Veterans experiencing homelessness (H-PACT) on frequency and type of ED visits in Veterans Health Administration (VHA) medical facilities.

Research Design: During a 12-month period, ED visits for 3981 homeless Veterans enrolled in (1) H-PACT at 20 VHA medical centers (enrolled) were compared with those of (2) 24,363 homeless Veterans not enrolled in H-PACT at the same sites (nonenrolled), and (3) 23,542 homeless Veterans at 12 non-H-PACT sites (usual care) using a difference-in-differences approach.

Measure(s): The primary outcome was ED and other health care utilization and the secondary outcome was emergent (not preventable/avoidable) ED visits.

Results: H-PACT enrollees were predominantly white males with a higher baseline Charlson comorbidity index. In comparing H-PACT enrollees with usual care, there was a significant decrease in ED usage among the highest ED utilizers (difference-in-differences, -4.43; P<0.001). The decrease in ED visits were significant though less intense for H-PACT enrollees versus nonenrolled (-0.29, P<0.001). H-PACT enrollees demonstrated a significant increase in the proportion of ED care visits that were not preventable/avoidable in the 6 months after enrollment, but had stable rates of primary care, mental health, social work, and substance abuse visits over the 12 months.

Conclusions: Primary care treatment engagement can reduce ED visits and increase appropriate use of ED services in VHA for Veterans experiencing homelessness, especially in the highest ED utilizers.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MLR.0000000000000770DOI Listing

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