In-Person and Video-Based Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Treatment for Veterans: A Location-Allocation Model
| By Benneyan, James | |
| Proquest LLC |
INTRODUCTION
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a serious mental health disorder that results in significant effects on physical and social well-being.1,2 PTSD is common among Americans with a prevalence of 3.7% in the general population, yet only 7% of those affected seek treatment in their first year, with a lifetime treatment-seeking rate of just over 50%.3,4 Given the vast medical and social costs of untreated or undertreated PTSD, there is a critical need to improve access to the most effective treatments.5-7 However, access to treat- ment, particularly for those residing in rural areas, is a prac- tical issue. This is even more the case for both active duty and veteran populations, with recent estimates from the wars in
Innovative treatment modalities, such as telehealth or video-based services, hold great promise to increase access to important effective mental health treatment services, par- ticularly in rural areas where access to in-person mental health treatment is limited.9 Large integrated health systems such as the
METHODS
Study Location
Because receipt of a PTSD diagnosis requires access to care, we used estimates of overall PTSD prevalence among VA users rather than diagnostic codes in VISN-1 to estimate PTSD prevalence. The most contemporary figures available on PTSD prevalence among VA users are derived from the current cohort of returning veterans. The VA Environmental Epidemiology Service found that 741,954 of
Location of Patients
We determined the 3-digit zip code geographic location of each veteran in
Location of Clinic Sites
We mapped the location of all current VA care sites in
Modeling Clinical Needs for Each Location
We used our mathematical model to assign each PTSD patient to the best close VA clinic site. Location optimization models of this type typically are used by systems engineers in many industries to determine the location of facilities relative to geographic and longitudinal demand, including some applications in health care.17-19 This approach also can produce a more patient-centered balance between use of in-person and video-based services. Assignments of care types to sites were made regardless of current services at them, along with assignment of PTSD patients to these sites to determine who ideally should be seen where. VA goals for maximum acceptable travel distances (currently 30 miles for PTSD care) were used to determine these service locations, patient destinations, and if a particular patient could receive within-network in-person care. Those that could not receive in-person care within the VISN-1 network were considered candidates for video-based care rather than outside the VA system in a manner so as to minimize total care and delivery costs. Although the 30 mile travel threshold is defined by the VA's central office, we also repeated our analysis for other maximum distances to investigate how results might change for other thresholds. We additionally computed the clinical care and travel costs associated with each patient, aggregated by clinic site and for the region as a whole.
Other model inputs, constraints, and assumptions included:
(1) PTSD treatment preferences among VA users were assumed to be (a) 60% want evidence-based psycho- therapy only, (b) 25% want medication only, and (c) 15% want both.20
(2) Assumptions of evidence-based psychotherapy included: (a) Conducted by psychotherapists (i.e., with at mini- mum a master's degree); (b) consisted of one evalua- tion, 12 treatment sessions, and three phone calls; and (c) a total of 13.75 clinical hours needed per patient per year. Clinical hours were allotted 1 hour for evalu- ation, 1 hour for each treatment session, and 15 minutes for each phone call, based on typical session lengths. Evidence-based psychotherapy was defined by the VA/DoD Clinical Practice Guideline for the Manage- ment of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder21 and Uni- form
(3) Medication assumptions included the following: (a) Prescribed by psychiatrists; (b) consisted of one evaluation session, six follow-up visits, and three phone calls; and (c) a total of 4.75 clinical hours needed per patient per year. For psychiatrist clinical hours, we allotted 1 hour for evaluation session, 1 hour for each follow-up visit, and 15 minutes for each phone call.
(4) Mental health staff not located in specialized PTSD clinics spent 75% of their time addressing disorders other than PTSD.
The primary goal of the model (the objective function, in systems engineering language) was to minimize VISN-1's total cost of PTSD care while still satisfying the above travel distance requirements, treatment preferences, and logistical constraints. The following variables are calculated by our model: treatment and travel costs for patients who receive services within the VA and care costs for patients not able to obtain care at any VA clinic. VA care costs also included travel costs for distances more than 30 miles, based on the VA's travel reimbursement policy. An overview of our math- ematical model is given in Table I.
RESULTS
Data and Parameters
The location of VA users with PTSD in
Model Results
Figure 2 shows the trade-off between maximum acceptable driving distance, total minimal cost, and access for the esti- mated 2010 PTSD care demand. Also shown is the current situation for comparison, estimated based on current patient allocations, which has an 11.08% (
Table II summarizes the resulting optimal locations of in-person PTSD services and the number of psychotherapist and psychiatrist FTEs required at each site to provide this care. As shown, rural pockets of
DISCUSSION
This study illustrates the potential value of the use of systems engineering models to help design an overall system that provides appropriate access and considers patient needs and preferences, at minimal cost. A few limitations include logic, data, and preference assumptions in our model. For example, we assume providers trained in treating PTSD are available or could be relocated to each clinic site, which may not be possible immediately, in which case results can represent an upper bound on maximal potential savings for benchmark comparison; additional or temporary reliance on telemental health services also may be possible. The few trials that compared the effectiveness of in-person versus remote PTSD treatments did not detect differences but also were not powered to determine noninferiority.23 -25 Assumptions regarding patient treatment preference also were based on a pilot sample20 and were assumed to be equally distributed across the patient population. Rural patients instead, for example, may have higher preference for medication treat- ment. It also is not clear that all VA users have a preference for or an understanding of evidence-based psychotherapy. Although the VA follows guidelines that promote evidence- based treatment,21,22,26 the definition of evidence-based psy- chotherapy is not universal and instead for example could be defined as listed in the National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practices.27,28 The recent Re-Engineering Systems of Primary Care Treatment (RESPECT)-PTSD trial14 also showed the difficulty of implementing evidence- based care for PTSD by primary care providers. In addition to psychiatrists, medications also can be prescribed by nurse practitioners, physician assistants, or primary care physicians and therefore our medication-prescribing estimate may be conservative. Finally, our results have based only on the New England VA network, although the general value of this approach seems generalizable to all VISNs.
CONCLUSION
This study highlights the need and value of appropriate allo- cation of PTSD services for veterans. Results can be useful as input for informing PTSD resource planning within the
For the VA population, most clinic sites have sufficient volume to justify in-person staff for face-to-face PTSD treat- ment. There are a small number of community-based clinics, however, whose estimated demand is insufficient to justify in-person staff. For these sites, our analysis suggests that PTSD treatment needs would be better met by video-based services. In general, these sites were in rural or highly rural regions of
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Hande Musdal, MSE*;
*
[dagger]
[double dagger]
§VA National Center for
||Geisel School of Medicine at
doi: 10.7205/MILMED-D-13-00177
| Copyright: | (c) 2014 Association of Military Surgeons of the United States |
| Wordcount: | 3708 |



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