• Medical care · May 2014

    VA health service utilization for homeless and low-income Veterans: a spotlight on the VA Supportive Housing (VASH) program in greater Los Angeles.

    • Sonya Gabrielian, Anita H Yuan, Ronald M Andersen, Lisa V Rubenstein, and Lillian Gelberg.
    • *Department of Psychiatry †Mental Illness Research, Education & Clinical Center ‡Health Services Research & Development Center of Excellence for the Study of Healthcare Provider Behavior, VA Greater Los Angeles §Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, UCLA ∥Veterans Emergency Management Evaluation Center ¶School of Public Health, UCLA #Department of Medicine, VA Greater Los Angeles, Los Angeles **RAND Corp., Santa Monica ††Department of Family Medicine, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA.
    • Med Care. 2014 May 1; 52 (5): 454-61.

    BackgroundThe US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)-VA Supportive Housing (VASH) program-the VA's Housing First effort-is central to efforts to end Veteran homelessness. Yet, little is known about health care utilization patterns associated with achieving HUD-VASH housing.ObjectivesWe compare health service utilization at the VA Greater Los Angeles among: (1) formerly homeless Veterans housed through HUD-VASH (HUD-VASH Veterans); (2) currently homeless Veterans; (3) housed, low-income Veterans not in HUD-VASH; and (4) housed, not low-income Veterans.Research DesignWe performed a secondary database analysis of Veterans (n=62,459) who received VA Greater Los Angeles care between October 1, 2010 and September 30, 2011. We described medical/surgical and mental health utilization [inpatient, outpatient, and emergency department (ED)]. We controlled for demographics, need, and primary care use in regression analyses of utilization data by housing and income status.ResultsHUD-VASH Veterans had more inpatient, outpatient, and ED use than currently homeless Veterans. Adjusting for demographics and need, HUD-VASH Veterans and the low-income housed Veterans had similar likelihoods of medical/surgical inpatient and outpatient utilization, compared with the housed, not low-income group. Adjusting first for demographics and need (model 1), then also for primary care use (model 2), HUD-VASH Veterans had the greatest decrease in incident rates of specialty medical/surgical, mental health, and ED care from models 1 to 2, becoming similar to the currently homeless, compared with the housed, not low-income group.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that currently homeless Veterans underuse health care relative to housed Veterans. HUD-VASH may address this disparity by providing housing and linkages to primary care.

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