Drivers of Veterans’ Healthcare Choices and Experiences with Veterans Affairs and Civilian Healthcare
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Focus Group Protocol
2.2. Recruitment
2.3. Participants
2.4. Procedures
2.5. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Veterans’ Reasons for VA Utilization
“I’m delighted with the care I get at the VA, and it was free, and the idea that I could have competent people who paid attention to me who were concerned, and they ordered tests that they thought needed to be ordered. It was free. I was just delighted to have it and I’d be a fool to do anything else. Before I got involved with the VA, I was self-employed, and I had to buy my own medical insurance for me and my wife. And we felt it, you know, and not have to spend that kind of money. It was good.”
“I guess for myself it was just easier. I’ve had experiences with private insurances and they’re not necessarily any much better in terms of quality. And then once I was service connected with the VA, it just made everything much easier. So, for me, using the VA as my primary insurance is a lot more convenient.”
3.2. Veterans’ Experiences with VA Healthcare
“There’s a new person every time. And it feels like Groundhog Day, like the movie with Bill Murray. Every time I’m going in there, I’m explaining, I’m like, did you read the chart? Did you read the impressions from the imaging studies? You know, and then it’s like, I’m the one having to instruct them.”
“I have found that access to services like oncology and cancer surgery have been pretty bad. So, I’ve had to use my private insurance and pay more. While I would’ve liked to use the VA and not spend my savings on my private healthcare cost, I did not want to have cancer in my body for an extra four months based on the VA’s wait times.”
“Once they started building out the women’s clinic, it just made it so much easier. I remember in the beginning, they would put me in a separate room, so I wasn’t in the waiting room with all the men because it was getting awkward. And so in light of that, I personally feel cared for.”
“Then the change that happened around 2009 where it’s a woman designated clinic. You don’t have to deal with guys staring at you or asking you what branch your husband was in. That was a big change in 2009 that I think really helped out.”
“I’ve used the VA for a range of issues for the last 12 years. And some of it was related to having children and fertility. And that’s one area where I felt like the VA did not have access to cutting edge research.”
“A lot of us are mothers or single parents or solo parents. I wish they would ask that in our primary because we may need additional assistance that may be hindering our own health based on what our environment or where our situation is living.”
3.3. Veterans’ Reasons for Civilian Healthcare Utilization
“For me, it was waiting, I think it was three months I waited for my initial appointment after retiring. And then I had so much stuff to talk to the doctor about, that I had to do a follow-up appointment, which took another two months.”
“It’s [the VA] a teaching hospital. The doctors come and go, you never get the same one. And that’s what I hear from my friends that use the VA. That’s the major concern. They start from step one all the time.”
3.4. Veterans’ Experience with Civilian Healthcare
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Questions Primary Care VA 1 |
---|
What are the factors that led to your decision to choose the VA as primary source of healthcare? What keeps you using the VA? |
What have your experiences been like using the VA? |
Do you feel your healthcare providers are sensitive to your needs and experience as a veteran? For the women in the group, do you feel your healthcare providers are sensitive to your needs and experience as a woman? What do you think the VA does well? What do you think the VA needs to improve on? What are the biggest challenges to accessing care? One of the biggest barriers to using the VA in the original study was the perception that care is not as good at the VA. Have you heard this? Where do you think that stigma comes from? What if anything might make you switch to non-VHA care? Would you encourage other veterans to use the VA? |
Questions Primary Care Civilian Provider1 |
Can we start with everyone who is comfortable indicating where they get their primary care from? How many from employer insurance? From the choice program? A program such as Medicare, Medicaid or Covered California? Somewhere else? What are the factors that led to your decision to choose your primary source of healthcare? What have your experiences been like using your primary source of healthcare? Do you feel your healthcare providers are sensitive to your needs and experience as a veteran? For the women in the group, do you feel your healthcare providers are sensitive to your needs and experience as a woman? What do you think your primary care provider does well? What do you think they need to improve on? What are the biggest challenges to accessing care? Is there anything specific about the VA that made you choose not to use VA care as your primary provider? One of the biggest barriers to using the VA in the original study was the perception that care is not as good at the VA. Have you heard this? Where do you think that stigma comes from? What if anything might make you switch to using VA care? Would you encourage other veterans to use your source of healthcare? |
Group | Number of Participants (n = 59) |
---|---|
VA Users Group 1 | 10 |
VA Users Group 2 | 10 |
VA Users Group 3 | 8 |
VA Users Group 4 | 5 |
Non-VA Users Group 1 | 8 |
Non-VA Users Group 2 | 4 |
Non-VA Users Group 3 | 4 |
Non-VA Users Group 4 | 10 |
Percent | |
---|---|
Age | |
18–29 | 1.7 |
30–39 | 22.4 |
40–49 | 19.0 |
50–59 | 20.7 |
60–69 | 22.4 |
70 and older | 13.8 |
Race | |
American Indian or Alaska Native | --- |
Asian | 6.9 |
Black or African American | 15.5 |
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander | --- |
White | 72.4 |
Other | 10.3 |
Hispanic, Latino or Spanish Origin | |
Yes | 25.9 |
No | 74.1 |
Gender | |
Man | 56.9 |
Woman | 38.0 |
Non-Binary or Third Gender | 1.7 |
Prefer not to say | 1.7 |
Prefer to self-describe | 1.7 |
Highest Education Level | |
High School Diploma | 1.7 |
Some College | 15.5 |
Associate’s Degree | 8.6 |
Bachelor’s Degree | 25.9 |
Master’s Degree | 36.2 |
Doctorate Degree | 6.9 |
Other | 3.4 |
Missing | 1.7 |
Marital Status | |
Single | 19.0 |
Married | 56.9 |
Divorced | 20.7 |
Widowed | 3.4 |
Branch of Service | |
Air Force | 17.2 |
Army | 27.6 |
Marine Corps | 25.9 |
Navy | 29.3 |
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Share and Cite
Kintzle, S.; Alday, E.; Sutherland, A.; Castro, C.A. Drivers of Veterans’ Healthcare Choices and Experiences with Veterans Affairs and Civilian Healthcare. Healthcare 2024, 12, 1852. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12181852
Kintzle S, Alday E, Sutherland A, Castro CA. Drivers of Veterans’ Healthcare Choices and Experiences with Veterans Affairs and Civilian Healthcare. Healthcare. 2024; 12(18):1852. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12181852
Chicago/Turabian StyleKintzle, Sara, Eva Alday, Aubrey Sutherland, and Carl A. Castro. 2024. "Drivers of Veterans’ Healthcare Choices and Experiences with Veterans Affairs and Civilian Healthcare" Healthcare 12, no. 18: 1852. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12181852
APA StyleKintzle, S., Alday, E., Sutherland, A., & Castro, C. A. (2024). Drivers of Veterans’ Healthcare Choices and Experiences with Veterans Affairs and Civilian Healthcare. Healthcare, 12(18), 1852. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12181852