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Research Article

Home Modification and Health Services Utilization by Rural and Urban Veterans With Disabilities

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Pages 862-874
Received 26 Feb 2020
Accepted 30 Nov 2020
Published online: 04 Mar 2021
 

ABSTRACT

Inaccessible home environments that create barriers to the enjoyment and the approachability of the living space impact some U.S. Veterans. Injuries acquired while serving in the military or developed through the aging process complicate matters for Veterans with disabilities. Home modifications (HM) afforded by the Home Improvements and Structural Alterations (HISA) program can increase accessibility. We examine the difference between urban and rural Veterans in their health service utilization (hospitalization versus outpatient encounters) 12 months before and 12 months after their HISA use. All the study patients were Veterans with disabilities who use the HISA program. There is a significant decrease in hospitalization post-HM as compared with pre-HM provision for all HM users. There is a significant increase in outpatient encounters post-HM as compared with pre-HM provision for all users. Rural vs. urban status was only significant in outpatient encounters 12 months pre-provision of HM. Provision of HM is associated with favorable clinical outcomes such as decreased hospitalization and increased preventative outpatient care visits. Our findings suggest some subset of hospitalizations could be prevented or delayed if timely and appropriate outpatient care is accessible to patients along with HM. Increasing the provision of HM services such as HISA can free up hospital beds, reduce cost to both individuals and institutions, decrease the risk of hospital acquired morbidity, and promote community integration.

Acknowledgments

We thank Dr. Tatiana Orozco (Statistician at Research Service, Veterans Health Administration, North Florida/South Georgia Veterans Health System) for her consultation. Her technical expertise contributed to a much-improved product.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This project was a locally initiated project funded [LIP040115] by the North Florida/South Georgia Veteran Health System and by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Office of Rural Health.

Notes on contributors

Luz Mairena Semeah

Luz Mairena Semeah, PhD, MPA., is a Health Science Specialist with the Veterans Rural Health Resource Center-Gainesville and a former Health Services Research and Development Fellow both positions within the North Florida/South Georgia Veterans Health System, Veterans Health Administration in Gainesville, FL. She received a PhD in housing from Virginia Tech. Her research focuses on (1) health services access and utilization, (2) disability policy, (3) housing as a social determinant of health and as a non-institutional healthcare setting (4) housing accessibility. She is specifically interested in the health outcomes of patients who display disruptive behaviors against healthcare workers in the home and the implications of underreporting such behaviors by clinicians to health policy and access quality care.

Shanti P. Ganesh

Shanti P. Ganesh, MD, MPH, MS., is a Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Physician and Researcher working at the Jacksonville, Florida Veterans Affairs (VA) Outpatient Clinic.  She received her Doctor of Medicine degree (MD) from Duke University, her Master of Public Health (MPH) in Epidemiology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Public Health, and her Master of Science (MS) in Public Health, Epidemiology, from the University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health.  Clinically she is a general physiatrist working with patients with brain injury, amputation, musculoskeletal issues, general disability and those needing electrodiagnostic evaluation. Her research focuses on clinical functional outcomes.

Xinping Wang

Xinping Wang, PhD, is a Statistician in Research Services within the Florida/South Georgia Veterans Health System, Gainesville, Florida. He previously worked as a Statistician and Data Manager for the Veterans Health Administration’s Center of Innovation on Disability & Rehabilitation Research (CINDRR) for the last 17 years, He has provided data matching, extraction, cleaning, and analysis for almost all CINDRR research projects using SAS and SQL Server. He also worked extensively on requesting and merging Medicare and Medicaid databases to U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) cohorts for dual use research of VA and non-VA Veterans. He has worked with Principal Investigators in defining study cohort, matching study cohort’s patients to extract VA data needed. Other related skills: GIS, SPSS, website and database development.

Diane C. Cowper Ripley

Diane C. Cowper Ripley, PhD, is the Founding Director and Director Emeritus of the Geo Spatial Outcomes Division, Veterans Health Administration, Office of Rural Health. She received her doctorate in Health Services Research from the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida. She retired from the Department of Veterans Affairs after 35 years of service.

Zaccheus James Ahonle

Zaccheus James Ahonle, PhD, is an Assistant Professor in the Counseling, Educational Psychology, & Foundations (CEPF) Department at Mississippi State University. He is a researcher, educator, and a certified rehabilitation counselor. Dr. Ahonle has background in rehabilitation counseling, with expertise in applying quantitative and mixed-method research methodologies to large vocational and health rehabilitation datasets; and expertise in outcome research and assistive technology assessments to improve return to work (RTW), home modification and independent living (IL) outcomes of persons with disabilities.  His research focuses on employment/return to work (RTW), return to school, and IL outcomes for the most vulnerable populations, especially persons with Traumatic Brain Injury, Veterans with disabilities, and Opioid Use Disorder. He is currently collaborating with Health Services Researchers at the VA on a study exploring the use of tele-mediated technologies in improving access and utilization of vocational rehabilitation intervention and IL services for Veterans living in rural areas.

Mi Jung Lee

Mi Jung Lee, PhD, is a Research Assistant Professor in the Division of Rehabilitation Science at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. She is currently a National Institute of Health/Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NIH/NICHD) K12 scholar and principal investigator (PI)/Co-PI on two research studies, applying machine learning methodologies to large healthcare datasets. Her focus areas are health informatics, measurement science, and home safety assessment in rehabilitation science.

Tatiana Orozco

Tatiana Orozco, PhD, is a Statistician and Research Health Scientist in Research Services within the Florida/South Georgia Veterans Health System, Gainesville, Florida. She earned her master’s and doctoral degrees in social psychology from the University of Florida in 2010 and 2013, respectively. Over the last few years at VA, she has collaborated as a statistician, data manager, or co-investigator on various projects ranging from observational studies to randomized clinical trials. Her primary research interests lie in quantitative methods and data analysis specifically, but also in meta-science more broadly.

Jennifer Hale-Gallardo

Jennifer Hale-Gallardo, PhD, is a Health Science Specialist at the North Florida/South Georgia Veterans Health System. She has a background in medical anthropology, with expertise in qualitative and mixed-method research methodologies. Dr. Hale-Gallardo has designed and conducted research for VA Health Services and Research Development (HSR&D), Veterans Health Administration, Office of Rural Health, and Veterans Affairs Central Office’s Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Her focus at the VA has been on improving the understanding of long-term services and support needs for Veterans with chronic disease and functional limitations.

Huanguang Jia

Huanguang Jia, PhD, is a Research Consultant with Research Service at VA NF/SG VHS. Previously, Dr. Jia has been a Research Health Scientist with VA Health Services and Research Development (HSR&D) and a courtesy professor with University of Florida’s College of Public Health and Health Professions in Gainesville, Florida. Over the last 18 years, Dr. Jia has been the Principal Investigator for 6 VA HSR&D-funded research projects and Co-Investigator for many other VA and none-VA funded research projects. These health services research projects focus on healthcare accessibility, utilization, quality and health-related outcomes across the care continuum among Veterans challenged by disability and limited access to Veterans Health Administration services.

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