4.6 Article

Quality of Depression Care for Veterans Affairs Primary Care Patients with Experiences of Homelessness

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-023-08077-8

Keywords

primary care; depression; homelessness; veterans

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PEH in homeless-tailored primary care settings receive higher quality of depression care compared to PEH in usual VA primary care.
BackgroundPersons who experience homelessness (PEH) have high rates of depression and incur challenges accessing high-quality health care. Some Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities offer homeless-tailored primary care clinics, although such tailoring is not required, within or outside VA. Whether services tailoring enhances care for depression is unstudied.ObjectiveTo determine whether PEH in homeless-tailored primary care settings receive higher quality of depression care, compared to PEH in usual VA primary care.DesignRetrospective cohort study of depression treatment among a regional cohort of VA primary care patients (2016-2019).ParticipantsPEH diagnosed or treated for a depressive disorder.Main MeasuresThe quality measures were timely follow-up care (3 + completed visits with a primary care or mental health specialist provider, or 3 + psychotherapy sessions) within 84 days of a positive PHQ-2 screen result, timely follow-up care within 180 days, and minimally appropriate treatment (4 + mental health visits, 3 + psychotherapy visits, 60 + days antidepressant) within 365 days. We applied multivariable mixed-effect logistic regressions to model differences in care quality for PEH in homeless-tailored versus usual primary care settings.Key ResultsThirteen percent of PEH with depressive disorders received homeless-tailored primary care (n = 374), compared to usual VA primary care (n = 2469). Tailored clinics served more PEH who were Black, who were non-married, and who had low income, serious mental illness, and substance use disorders. Among all PEH, 48% received timely follow-up care within 84 days of depression screening, 67% within 180 days, and 83% received minimally appropriate treatment. Quality metric attainment was higher for PEH in homeless-tailored clinics, compared to PEH in usual VA primary care: follow-up within 84 days (63% versus 46%; adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 1.61, p = .001), follow-up within 180 days (78% versus 66%; AOR = 1.51, p = .003), and minimally appropriate treatment (89% versus 82%; AOR = 1.58, p = .004).ConclusionsHomeless-tailored primary care approaches may improve depression care for PEH.

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