Articles

Comparing mental and physical health of U.S. veterans by VA healthcare use: implications for generalizability of research in the VA electronic health records

Fink, David S.; Stohl, Malka; Mannes, Zachary L.; Shmulewitz, Dvora; Wall, Melanie; Gutkind, Sarah; Olfson, Mark; Gradus, Jaimie; Keyhani, Salomeh; Maynard, Charles; Keyes, Katherine M.; Sherman, Scott; Martins, Silvia; Saxon, Andrew J.; Hasin, Deborah S.

Objective
The Department of Veterans Affairs’ (VA) electronic health records (EHR) offer a rich source of big data to study medical and health care questions, but patient eligibility and preferences may limit generalizability of findings. We therefore examined the representativeness of VA veterans by comparing veterans using VA healthcare services to those who do not.
Methods
We analyzed data on 3051 veteran participants age ≥ 18 years in the 2019 National Health Interview Survey. Weighted logistic regression was used to model participant characteristics, health conditions, pain, and self-reported health by past year VA healthcare use and generate predicted marginal prevalences, which were used to calculate Cohen’s d of group differences in absolute risk by past-year VA healthcare use.
Results
Among veterans, 30.4% had past-year VA healthcare use. Veterans with lower income and members of racial/ethnic minority groups were more likely to report past-year VA healthcare use. Health conditions overrepresented in past-year VA healthcare users included chronic medical conditions (80.6% vs. 69.4%, d = 0.36), pain (78.9% vs. 65.9%; d = 0.35), mental distress (11.6% vs. 5.9%; d = 0.47), anxiety (10.8% vs. 4.1%; d = 0.67), and fair/poor self-reported health (27.9% vs. 18.0%; d = 0.40).
Conclusions
Heterogeneity in veteran sociodemographic and health characteristics was observed by past-year VA healthcare use. Researchers working with VA EHR data should consider how the patient selection process may relate to the exposures and outcomes under study. Statistical reweighting may be needed to generalize risk estimates from the VA EHR data to the overall veteran population.

Geographic Areas

Files

  • thumnail for 12913_2022_Article_8899.pdf 12913_2022_Article_8899.pdf application/pdf 321 KB Download File

Also Published In

Title
BMC Health Services Research
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-022-08899-y

More About This Work

Published Here
July 22, 2024

Notes

Generalizability, Big data, Electronic health records, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans health