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JAMA Psychiatry | 2016

Differential Risk for Homelessness Among US Male and Female Veterans With a Positive Screen for Military Sexual Trauma

Emily Brignone; Adi V. Gundlapalli; Rebecca K. Blais; Marjorie E. Carter; Ying Suo; Matthew H. Samore; Rachel Kimerling; Jamison D. Fargo

IMPORTANCE Military sexual trauma (MST) is associated with adverse physical and mental health outcomes following military separation. Recent research suggests that MST may be a determinant in several factors associated with postdeployment homelessness. OBJECTIVE To evaluate MST as an independent risk factor for homelessness and to determine whether risk varies by sex. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A retrospective cohort study of US veterans who used Veterans Health Administration (VHA) services between fiscal years 2004 and 2013 was conducted using administrative data from the Department of Defense and VHA. Included in the study were 601 892 US veterans deployed in Iraq or Afghanistan who separated from the military between fiscal years 2001 and 2011 and subsequently used VHA services. EXPOSURE Positive response to screen for MST administered in VHA facilities. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Administrative evidence of homelessness within 30 days, 1 year, and 5 years following the first VHA encounter after last deployment. RESULTS The mean (SD) age of the 601 892 participants was 38.9 (9.4) years, 527 874 (87.7%) were male, 310 854 (51.6%) were white, and 382 361 (63.5%) were enlisted in the Army. Among veterans with a positive screen for MST, rates of homelessness were 1.6% within 30 days, 4.4% within 1 year, and 9.6% within 5 years, more than double the rates of veterans with a negative MST screen (0.7%, 1.8%, and 4.3%, respectively). A positive screen for MST was significantly and independently associated with postdeployment homelessness. In regression models adjusted for demographic and military service characteristics, odds of experiencing homelessness were higher among those who screened positive for MST compared with those who screened negative (30-day: adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 1.89; 95% CI, 1.58-2.24; 1-year: AOR, 2.27; 95% CI, 2.04-2.53; and 5-year: AOR, 2.63; 95% CI, 2.36-2.93). Military sexual trauma screen status remained independently associated with homelessness after adjusting for co-occurring mental health and substance abuse diagnoses in follow-up regression models (30-day: AOR, 1.62; 95% CI, 1.36-1.93; 1-year: AOR, 1.49; 95% CI, 1.33-1.66; and 5-year: AOR, 1.39; 95% CI, 1.24-1.55). In the fully adjusted models, the interaction between MST status and sex was significant in the 30-day and 1-year cohorts (30-day: AOR, 1.54; 95% CI, 1.18-2.02; and 1-year: AOR, 1.46; 95% CI, 1.23-1.74), denoting higher risk for homelessness among males with a positive screen for MST. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE A positive screen for MST was independently associated with postdeployment homelessness, with male veterans at greater risk than female veterans. These results underscore the importance of the MST screen as a clinically important marker of reintegration outcomes among veterans. These findings demonstrate significant long-term negative effects and inform our understanding of the public health implications of sexual abuse and harassment.


Medical Care | 2017

Long-acting Reversible Contraception Among Homeless Women Veterans With Chronic Health Conditions: A Retrospective Cohort Study

Lori M. Gawron; Andrew Redd; Ying Suo; Warren B. P. Pettey; David K. Turok; Adi V. Gundlapalli

Background: US women Veterans are at increased risk of homelessness and chronic health conditions associated with unintended pregnancy. Veterans Health Administration (VHA) provision of long-acting reversible contraception (LARC) can assist in healthy pregnancy planning. Objectives: To evaluate perinatal risk factors and LARC exposure in ever-homeless women Veterans. Research Design: A retrospective cohort study of women Veterans using VHA administrative data from fiscal years 2002–2015. Subjects: We included 41,747 ever-homeless women Veterans age 18–44 years and 46,391 housed women Veterans matched by military service period. A subgroup of 7773 ever-homeless and 8674 matched housed women Veterans deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan [Operations Enduring Freedom/Iraqi Freedom/New Dawn (OEF/OIF/OND)] conflicts comprised a second analytic cohort. Measures: Descriptive statistics compared demographic, military, health conditions, and LARC exposure in ever-homeless versus housed women Veterans. Multivariable logistic regression explored factors associated with LARC exposure in the OEF/OIF/OND subgroup. Results: All health conditions were significantly higher in ever-homeless versus housed Veterans: mental health disorder in 84.5% versus 48.7% (P<0.001), substance abuse in 35.8% versus 8.6% (P<0.001), and medical conditions in 74.7% versus 55.6% (P<0.001). LARC exposure among all VHA users was 9.3% in ever-homeless Veterans versus 5.4% in housed Veterans (P<0.001). LARC exposure in the OEF/OIF/OND cohort was 14.1% in ever-homeless Veterans versus 8.2% in housed Veterans (P<0.001). In the OEF/OIF/OND cohort, homelessness along Veterans with medical and mental health indicators were leading LARC exposure predictors. Conclusions: The VHA is successfully engaging homeless women Veterans and providing LARC access. The prevalence of perinatal risk factors in ever-homeless women Veterans highlights a need for further programmatic enhancements to improve reproductive planning.


Psychological Services | 2017

Gender differences in service utilization among Operations Enduring Freedom, Iraqi Freedom, and New Dawn Veterans Affairs patients with severe mental illness and substance use disorders.

Janelle M. Painter; Emily Brignone; Amanda K. Gilmore; Keren Lehavot; Jamison D. Fargo; Ying Suo; Tracy L. Simpson; Marjorie E. Carter; Rebecca K. Blais; Adi V. Gundlapalli

Severe mental illness (SMI) and substance use disorders (SUD) are among the more chronic and costly mental health conditions treated in the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Service use patterns of returning veterans with SMI and SUD have received little attention. We examined gender differences in the utilization of VA services among a national sample of Operations Enduring Freedom, Iraqi Freedom, and New Dawn (OEF/OIF/OND) VA patients with SMI, SUD, and their comorbidity (SMI/SUD) in their first year of established VA care (N = 24,166). Outpatient services and acute–residential stays were modeled using negative binomial and logistic regression, respectively. Among all diagnostic categories, men used outpatient services less often than did women, including primary care (adjusted rate ratio [ARR] = .71, 95% confidence interval CI [.68, .74]), mental health (ARR = .85, 95% CI [.80, .91]), and addiction (ARR = .91, 95% CI [.83, .99]) services. For emergency department (ED) and psychiatric inpatient services, gender interacted significantly with diagnosis. The combination of SMI/SUD compared to either SMI or SUD conferred greater risk of ED utilization among men than women (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 2.09, 95% CI [1.24, 3.51], and 1.95, 95% CI [1.17, 3.26], respectively). SMI versus SUD conferred greater risk of psychiatric inpatient utilization among men than women (AOR = 1.83, 95% CI [1.43, 2.34]). Our findings point to gender differences in outpatient and acute service utilization among OEF/OIF/OND VA patients with some of the more chronic and costly mental health conditions. Further investigation of health care utilization patterns is needed to understand factors driving these gender differences to ensure that veterans have appropriate access to the services they need.


ICIMTH | 2017

Using structured and unstructured data to refine estimates of military sexual trauma status among Us Military Veterans

Adi V. Gundlapalli; Emily Brignone; Guy Divita; Audrey L. Jones; Andrew Redd; Ying Suo; Warren B. P. Pettey; April F. Mohanty; Lori M. Gawron; Rebecca K. Blais; Matthew H. Samore; Jamison D. Fargo

Sexual trauma survivors are reluctant to disclose such a history due to stigma. This is likely the case when estimating the prevalence of sexual trauma experienced in the military. The Veterans Health Administration has a program by which all former US military service members (Veterans) are screened for military sexual trauma (MST) using a questionnaire. Administrative data on MST screens and a change of status from an initial negative answer to positive and natural language processing (NLP) on electronic medical notes to extract concepts related to MST were used to refine initial estimates of MST among a random sample of 20,000 Veterans. The initial MST positive screen of 15.4% among women was revised upward to 21.8% using administrative data and further to 24.5% by adding NLP results. The overall estimate of MST status in women and men in this sample was revised from 8.1% to 13.1% using both data elements.


ICIMTH | 2017

Distance to Veterans Administration Medical Centers as a Barrier to Specialty Care for Homeless Women Veterans.

Lori M. Gawron; Warren B. P. Pettey; Andrew Redd; Ying Suo; Adi V. Gundlapalli

Homeless women Veterans have a high prevalence of chronic mental and physical conditions that necessitate frequent healthcare visits, but travel burdens to specialty services may be overwhelming to navigate for this population, especially for those in rural settings. Access to specialty care is a key priority in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) and understanding the geographic distribution and rural designation of this population in relation to medical centers (VAMC) can assist in care coordination. We identified 41,747 women Veterans age 18-44y with administrative evidence of homelessness in the VHA anytime during 2002-2015. We found 7% live in rural settings and 29% live >40miles from a VAMC. The mean travel distance for homeless women Veterans with a rural designation to a VAMC specialty center was 107 miles. Developing interventions to overcome this travel burden and engage vulnerable Veterans in necessary care can improve overall health outcomes for this high-risk population.


ICIMTH | 2017

Characteristics of the Highest Users of Emergency Services in Veterans Affairs Hospitals: Homeless and Non-Homeless.

Adi V. Gundlapalli; Audrey L. Jones; Andrew Redd; Ying Suo; Warren B. P. Pettey; April F. Mohanty; Emily Brignone; Lori M. Gawron; Megan E. Vanneman; Matthew H. Samore; Jamison D. Fargo

Efforts are underway to understand recent increases in emergency department (ED) use and to offer case management to those patients identified as high utilizers. Homeless Veterans are thought to use EDs for non-emergent conditions. This study identifies the highest users of ED services in the Department of Veterans Affairs and provides descriptive analyses of these Veterans, the diagnoses for which they were seen in the ED, and differences based on their homeless status. Homeless Veterans were more likely than non-homeless Veterans to have >10 visits in the 2014 calendar year (12% vs. <1%). Homeless versus non-homeless Veterans with >10 visits were more often male, 10 ED visits were often treated for chest and abdominal pain, and back problems, whereas homeless Veterans were frequently treated for mental health/substance use. Tailored case management approaches may be needed to better link homeless Veterans with high ED use to appropriate outpatient care.


16th World Congress of Medical and Health Informatics: Precision Healthcare through Informatics, MedInfo 2017 | 2017

Extracting sexual trauma mentions from electronic medical notes using natural language processing

Guy Divita; Emily Brignone; Marjorie E. Carter; Ying Suo; Rebecca K. Blais; Matthew H. Samore; Jamison D. Fargo; Adi V. Gundlapalli

Patient history of sexual trauma is of clinical relevance to healthcare providers as survivors face adverse health-related outcomes. This paper describes a method for identifying mentions of sexual trauma within the free text of electronic medical notes. A natural language processing pipeline for information extraction was developed and scaled to handle a large corpus of electronic medical notes used for this study from US Veterans Health Administration medical facilities. The tool was used to identify sexual trauma mentions and create snippets around every asserted mention based on a domain-specific lexicon developed for this purpose. All snippets were evaluated by trained human reviewers. An overall positive predictive value (PPV) of 0.90 for identifying sexual trauma mentions from the free text and a PPV of 0.71 at the patient level are reported. The metrics are superior for records from female patients.


Womens Health Issues | 2016

Military Sexual Trauma and Co-occurring Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Depressive Disorders, and Substance Use Disorders among Returning Afghanistan and Iraq Veterans

Amanda K. Gilmore; Emily Brignone; Janelle M. Painter; Keren Lehavot; Jamison D. Fargo; Ying Suo; Tracy L. Simpson; Marjorie E. Carter; Rebecca K. Blais; Adi V. Gundlapalli


Open Forum Infectious Diseases | 2014

873Using natural language processing on electronic medical notes to detect the presence of an indwelling urinary catheter

Adi V. Gundlapalli; Guy Divita; Tyler Forbush; Andrew Redd; Marjorie E. Carter; Ashley J. Gendrett; Kalpana Gupta; Ying Suo; B.S. Begum Durgahee; Sarah L. Krein; Michael A. Rubin; Anne Sales; Matthew H. Samore


Medical Care | 2018

Differences in Experiences with Care between Homeless and Nonhomeless Patients in Veterans Affairs Facilities with Tailored and Nontailored Primary Care Teams

Audrey L. Jones; Leslie R. M. Hausmann; Stefan G. Kertesz; Ying Suo; John Cashy; Maria K. Mor; James H. Schaefer; Adi V. Gundlapalli; Adam J. Gordon

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