• J Gen Intern Med · Sep 2024

    Use and Cost of Low-Value Services Among Veterans Dually Enrolled in VA and Medicare.

    • Thomas R Radomski, Elijah Z Lovelace, Florentina E Sileanu, Xinhua Zhao, Liam Rose, Aaron L Schwartz, Loren J Schleiden, Aimee N Pickering, Walid F Gellad, Michael J Fine, and Carolyn T Thorpe.
    • Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion (CHERP), VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System, Pittsburgh, PA, USA. radomskitr@upmc.edu.
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2024 Sep 1; 39 (12): 221522242215-2224.

    BackgroundOver half of veterans enrolled in the Veterans Health Administration (VA) are also enrolled in Medicare, potentially increasing their opportunity to receive low-value health services within and outside VA.ObjectivesTo characterize the use and cost of low-value services delivered to dually enrolled veterans from VA and Medicare.DesignRetrospective cross-sectional.ParticipantsVeterans enrolled in VA and fee-for-service Medicare (FY 2017-2018).Main MeasuresWe used VA and Medicare administrative data to identify 29 low-value services across 6 established domains: cancer screening, diagnostic/preventive testing, preoperative testing, imaging, cardiovascular testing, and surgery. We determined the count of low-value services per 100 veterans delivered in VA and Medicare in FY 2018 overall, by domain, and by individual service. We applied standardized estimates to determine each service's cost.Key ResultsAmong 1.6 million dually enrolled veterans, the mean age was 73, 97% were men, and 77% were non-Hispanic White. Overall, 63.2 low-value services per 100 veterans were delivered, affecting 32% of veterans; 22.9 services per 100 veterans were delivered in VA and 40.3 services per 100 veterans were delivered in Medicare. The total cost was $226.3 million (M), of which $62.6 M was spent in VA and $163.7 M in Medicare. The most common low-value service was prostate-specific antigen testing at 17.3 per 100 veterans (VA 55.9%, Medicare 44.1%). The costliest low-value service was percutaneous coronary intervention (VA $10.1 M, Medicare $32.8 M).ConclusionsNearly 1 in 3 dually enrolled veterans received a low-value service in FY18, with twice as many low-value services delivered in Medicare vs VA. Interventions to reduce low-value services for veterans should consider their substantial use of such services in Medicare.© 2024. This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply.

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