Perceived provider stress from care of high-risk patients may arise from challenges related to coordinating their care. Our findings suggest that the perception of receiving help for high-risk patient care may be valuable in reducing provider stress.
ObjectiveTo compare health care system problems or “hassles” experienced by Veterans receiving VA health care only versus those receiving dual care from both VA and non‐VA community providers.Data SourcesWe collected survey data in 2017‐2018 from 2444 randomly selected Veterans with four or more primary care visits in the prior year at one of 12 VA primary care clinics located in four geographically diverse regions of the United States.Study DesignWe used baseline surveys from the Coordination Toolkit and Coaching quality improvement project to explore Veterans’ experience of hassles (dependent variable), source of health care, self‐rated physical and mental health, and sociodemographics.Data CollectionParticipants responded to mailed surveys by mail, telephone, or online.Principal FindingsThe number of reported hassles ranged from 0 to 16; 79 percent of Veterans reported experiencing one or more hassles. Controlling for sociodemographic characteristics and self‐rated physical and mental health, zero‐inflated negative binominal regression indicated that dual care users experienced more hassles than VA‐only users (adjusted predicted average 5.5 [CI: 5.2, 5.8] vs 4.3 [CI: 4.1, 4.6] hassles [P < .0001]).ConclusionsAnticipated increases in Veterans accessing community‐based care may require new strategies to help VA primary care teams optimize care coordination for dual care users.
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