Home health utilization in the Veterans Health Administration: Are there rural and urban differences?

Author:

Davila Heather1234ORCID,Mayfield Bradely5,Mengeling Michelle A.234,Holcombe Andrea23,Miell Kelly R.23,Jaske Erin5,Iverson William146,Walkner Tammy23ORCID,Stewart Greg137,Solimeo Samantha1234

Affiliation:

1. Primary Care Analytics Team—Iowa City Veterans Health Administration (VA) Office of Primary Care Iowa City Iowa USA

2. Veterans Rural Health Resource Center—Iowa City VA Office of Rural Health Iowa City Iowa USA

3. Center for Access & Delivery Research and Evaluation Iowa City VA Health Care System Iowa City Iowa USA

4. Department of Internal Medicine University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine Iowa City Iowa USA

5. Primary Care Analytics Team—Seattle VA Office of Primary Care, VA Puget Sound Health Care System Seattle Washington USA

6. Department of Primary Care Iowa City VA Health Care System Iowa City Iowa USA

7. Tippie College of Business University of Iowa, Iowa City Iowa City Iowa USA

Abstract

AbstractPurposeGrowing numbers of older adults need home health care, yhese services may be more difficult to access for rural Veterans, who represent one‐third of Veterans Health Administration (VA) enrollees. Our objective was to examine whether home health use differs within VA based on rurality.MethodsWe examined national VA administrative data for 2019–2021 (January 1, 2019 to December 31, 2021) among Veterans ages ≥65 years. Using descriptive and multivariable analyses, we assessed whether rural versus urban Veterans differed in (1) the likelihood of using any home health and (2) for those who received ≥1 visit, number of visits received.ResultsAmong home health users (n = 107,229, 33.1% rural), rural and urban Veterans were similar in age (77.0 vs. 77.2 years). Rural Veterans were less likely to be highly frail (38.9% rural vs. 40.4% urban) or diagnosed with dementia (13.5% vs. 17.6%). After adjusting for Veterans’ characteristics, rural Veterans were more likely to receive any home health (odds ratio: 1.10; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.07, 1.13). Among Veterans who received ≥1 home health visit, rurality was associated with considerably fewer expected visits (incident rate ratio: 0.70; 95% CI: 0.68, 0.72).ConclusionsAlthough rural Veterans were more likely than urban Veterans to receive any home health services, they received considerably fewer home health visits. This difference may represent an access issue for rural Veterans. Future research is needed to identify reasons for these differences and develop strategies to ensure rural Veterans’ care needs are equitability addressed.

Publisher

Wiley

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