scholarly journals Ambulatory Medical Follow-Up in the Year After Surgery and Subsequent Survival in a National Cohort of Veterans Health Administration Surgical Patients

2016 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 671-679 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert B. Schonberger ◽  
Feng Dai ◽  
Cynthia Brandt ◽  
Matthew M. Burg
Neurology ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 90 (20) ◽  
pp. e1771-e1779 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raquel C. Gardner ◽  
Amy L. Byers ◽  
Deborah E. Barnes ◽  
Yixia Li ◽  
John Boscardin ◽  
...  

ObjectiveOur aim was to assess risk of Parkinson disease (PD) following traumatic brain injury (TBI), including specifically mild TBI (mTBI), among care recipients in the Veterans Health Administration.MethodsIn this retrospective cohort study, we identified all patients with a TBI diagnosis in Veterans Health Administration databases from October 2002 to September 2014 and age-matched 1:1 to a random sample of patients without TBI. All patients were aged 18 years and older without PD or dementia at baseline. TBI exposure and severity were determined via detailed clinical assessments or ICD-9 codes using Department of Defense and Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center criteria. Baseline comorbidities and incident PD more than 1 year post-TBI were identified using ICD-9 codes. Risk of PD after TBI was assessed using Cox proportional hazard models adjusted for demographics and medical/psychiatric comorbidities.ResultsAmong 325,870 patients (half with TBI; average age 47.9 ± 17.4 years; average follow-up 4.6 years), 1,462 were diagnosed with PD during follow-up. Compared to no TBI, those with TBI had higher incidence of PD (no TBI 0.31%, all-severity TBI 0.58%, mTBI 0.47%, moderate-severe TBI 0.75%). In adjusted models, all-severity TBI, mTBI, and moderate-severe TBI were associated with increased risk of PD (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval]: all-severity TBI 1.71 [1.53–1.92]; mTBI 1.56 [1.35–1.80]; moderate-severe TBI 1.83 [1.61–2.07]).ConclusionsAmong military veterans, mTBI is associated with 56% increased risk of PD, even after adjusting for demographics and medical/psychiatric comorbidities. This study highlights the importance of TBI prevention, long-term follow-up of TBI-exposed veterans, and the need to determine mechanisms and modifiable risk factors for post-TBI PD.


2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 480-484 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian T. Carney ◽  
Priscilla West ◽  
Julia B. Neily ◽  
Peter D. Mills ◽  
James P. Bagian

There are differences between nurse and physician perceptions of teamwork. The purpose of this study was to determine whether these differences would be reduced with medical team training (MTT). The Safety Attitudes Questionnaire was administered to nurses and physicians working in the operating rooms of 101 consecutive hospitals before and at the completion of an MTT program. Responses to the 6 teamwork climate items on the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire were analyzed using nonparametric testing. At baseline, physicians had more favorable perceptions on teamwork climate items than nurses. Physicians demonstrated improvement on all 6 teamwork climate items. Nurses demonstrated improvement in perceptions on all teamwork climate items except “Nurse input is well received.” Physicians still had a more favorable perception than nurses on all 6 teamwork climate items at follow-up. Despite an improvement in perceptions by physicians and nurses, baseline nurse–physician differences persisted at completion of the Veterans Health Administration MTT Program.


2021 ◽  
pp. OP.21.00317
Author(s):  
Cindy Y. Jiang ◽  
Garth W. Strohbehn ◽  
Rachel M. Dedinsky ◽  
Shelby M. Raupp ◽  
Brittany M. Pannecouk ◽  
...  

PURPOSE: There was rapid adoption of teleoncology care in the Veterans Health Administration during the COVID-19 pandemic. One third of 9 million Veterans Health Administration enrolled Veterans live in rural areas. Although digital solutions can expand capacity, enhance care access, and reduce financial burden, they may also exacerbate rural-urban health disparities. Careful evaluation of patients' perceptions and policy tradeoffs are necessary to optimize teleoncology postpandemic. METHODS: Patients with ≥ 1 teleoncology visit with medical, surgical, or radiation oncology between March 2020 and June 2020 were identified retrospectively. Validated, Likert-type survey assessing patient satisfaction was developed. Follow-up survey was conducted on patients with ≥ 1 teleoncology visit from August 2020 to January 2021. Travel distance, time, cost, and carbon dioxide emissions were calculated based on zip codes. RESULTS: A hundred surveys were completed (response rate, 62%). Patients overall were satisfied with teleoncology (83% Agree or Strongly Agree) but felt less satisfied than in-person visits (47% Agree or Strongly Agree). Audiovisual component improved patient perception of involvement in care, ability to self-manage health or medical needs, and comparability to in-person visits. Follow-up survey demonstrated similar satisfaction. Total travel-related savings are as follows: 86,470 miles, 84,374 minutes, $49,720 US dollars, and 35.5 metric tons of carbon dioxide. CONCLUSION: Veterans are broadly satisfied with teleoncology. Audiovisual capabilities are critical to satisfaction. This is challenging for rural populations with lack of technology access. Patients experienced financial and time savings, and society benefitted from reduced carbon emissions. Continued optimization is needed to enhance patient experience and address secondary effects.


2019 ◽  
Vol 98 (11) ◽  
pp. 2533-2539
Author(s):  
Shreekant Parasuraman ◽  
Jingbo Yu ◽  
Dilan Paranagama ◽  
Sulena Shrestha ◽  
Li Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract Patients with polycythemia vera (PV) have a high incidence of thrombotic events (TEs), contributing to a greater mortality risk than the general population. The relationship between hematocrit (HCT) levels and TE occurrence among patients with PV from the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) was evaluated to replicate findings of the CYTO-PV trial with a real-world patient population. This retrospective study used VHA medical record and claims data from the first claim with a PV diagnosis (index) until death, disenrollment, or end of study, collected between October 1, 2005, and September 30, 2012. Patients were aged ≥ 18 years at index, had ≥ 2 claims for PV (ICD-9-CM code, 238.4) ≥ 30 days apart during the identification period, continuous health plan enrollment from 12 months pre-index until end of study, and ≥ 3 HCT measurements per year during follow-up. This analysis focused on patients with no pre-index TE, and with all HCT values either < 45% or ≥ 45% during the follow-up period. The difference in TE risk between HCT groups was assessed using unadjusted Cox regression models based on time to first TE. Patients (N = 213) were mean (SD) age 68.9 (11.5) years, 98.6% male, and 61.5% white. TE rates for patients with HCT values < 45% versus ≥ 45% were 40.3% and 54.2%, respectively. Among patients with ≥ 1 HCT before TE, TE risk hazard ratio was 1.61 (95% CI, 1.03–2.51; P = 0.036). This analysis of the VHA population further supports effective monitoring and control of HCT levels < 45% to reduce TE risk in patients with PV.


2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (9) ◽  
pp. 997-1005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ellyn M. Russo ◽  
Jennifer Kuntz ◽  
Holly Yu ◽  
Jeremy Smith ◽  
Ronald George Hauser ◽  
...  

AbstractObjective:Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) remains a significant public health concern, resulting in excess morbidity, mortality, and costs. Additional insight into the burden of CDI in adults aged <65 years is needed.Design/Setting:A 6-year retrospective cohort study was conducted using data extracted from United States Veterans Health Administration electronic medical records.Patients/Methods:Patients aged 18–64 years on January 1, 2011, were followed until incident CDI, death, loss-to-follow-up, or December 31, 2016. CDI was identified by a diagnosis code accompanied by metronidazole, vancomycin, or fidaxomicin therapy, or positive laboratory test. The clinical setting of CDI onset was defined according to 2017 SHEA-IDSA guidelines.Results:Of 1,073,900 patients, 10,534 had a CDI during follow-up. The overall incidence rate was 177 CDIs per 100,000 person years, rising steadily from 164 per 100,000 person years in 2011 to 189 per 100,000 person years in 2016. Those with a CDI were slightly older (55 vs 51 years) and sicker, with a higher baseline Charlson comorbidity index score (1.4 vs 0.5) than those without an infection. Nearly half (48%) of all incident CDIs were community associated, and this proportion rose from 41% in 2011 to 56% in 2016.Conclusions:The findings from this large retrospective study indicate that CDI incidence, driven primarily by increasing community-associated infection, is rising among young and middle-aged adult Veterans with high service-related disability. The increasing burden of community associated CDI in this vulnerable population warrants attention. Future studies quantifying the economic and societal burden of CDI will inform decisions surrounding prevention strategies.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 1708-1708
Author(s):  
Richard E Nelson ◽  
Scott D Grosse ◽  
Junji Lin ◽  
Scott DuVall ◽  
Olga Patterson ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Existing sources of information on hospital-associated venous thromboembolism (HA-VTE) in the United States have important limitations. Key challenges include distinguishing probable or confirmed from possible cases of VTE; distinguishing new from recurrent VTE; and identifying events diagnosed after hospital discharge. Two types of administrative healthcare data are commonly used for estimates of HA-VTE in inpatients: hospital discharge databases and health insurance claims databases. Analyses of both types of data cannot confirm VTE diagnoses from medical records or reliably assess the timing of onset to distinguish postoperative or HA-VTE events. In addition, hospital discharge databases are limited to diagnoses occurring prior to discharge (before or during hospitalization). Although health insurance databases include outpatient records, the reliability of outpatient records is unclear. Because of the higher rate of HA-VTE among surgical patients, efforts to prevent and monitor HA-VTE often focus on postoperative VTE, which is the approach taken here. Methods This study used electronic health record (EHR) data from the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) to quantify the frequency of postoperative VTE within 30 and 90 days post-surgery among inpatient admissions of surgical patients at VHA hospitals during 2005-2010. Records were restricted to VHA surgical admissions of patients who had no record of a VTE event within 365 days preceding a surgery and were alive at either 30 or 90 days post-surgery without a repeat surgery. Inpatient VTE events were identified using diagnosis codes while outpatient VTE events were identified using a combination of diagnosis codes, procedure codes, pharmacy records, and the narrative text of EHR clinical notes. A natural language processing (NLP) system was developed to automatically find evidence of acute VTE events based on mentions in clinical notes. To confirm an outpatient event, we required within 14 days after the VTE diagnosis either a prescription for an anticoagulant or a CPT code for thrombectomy, embolectomy, vena cava filter placement, or thrombolysis and a positive finding of the event in the patient’s narrative clinic notes identified using an NLP tool. For each VTE, we distinguished whether it was diagnosed (1) post-surgery but pre-discharge, (2) post-discharge in a VHA outpatient setting, or (3) post-discharge in a VHA inpatient setting (readmission). Admissions were classified into 1 of 3 mutually exclusive types of surgery (1) major orthopedic (total knee or hip replacement or hip fracture surgery), (2) abdominal-pelvic, and (3) other. Results A total of 648,851 inpatient admissions occurred nationwide during 2005-2010 at one of 114 VHA facilities, of which 442,410 (from 363,545 unique patients) and 420,858 (from 347,794 unique patients) met the inclusion criteria for 30 and 90 days post-surgery, respectively. VTEs were documented in 3,845 (0.87%) and 5,383 (1.3%) surgical admissions where the patient was alive at 30 or 90 days, respectively. Postoperative VTEs occurred before discharge following 2,140 (0.48%) surgeries tracked through 30 days. Roughly one-half of postoperative VTEs were diagnosed after discharge, 44.3% of 30-day postoperative VTE events and 61.7% of 90-day postoperative VTE events. A VTE was diagnosed within 90 days of surgery in 1.9% of orthopedic surgery admissions, followed in frequency by abdominal-pelvic (1.4%), and other surgeries (1.2%). Among 3,483 VTE diagnoses identified post-discharge, 2,676 (76.4%) resulted in a VHA hospital readmission within 90 days of surgery, accounting for 3.4% of 78,473 90-day readmissions. Conclusion This study makes three key methodological contributions for identifying HA-VTE. First, detailed VHA inpatient data allowed us to isolate VTE events that occurred after the patients’ surgery and to exclude VTEs present prior to surgery. Second, these data allowed us to track HA-VTE events occurring up to 90 days following surgery. Third, we harnessed the information in unstructured narrative text using an NLP tool to verify an outpatient VTE diagnosis. To monitor HA-VTE, it is essential to track patients after discharge to identify potential VTE events diagnosed in outpatient settings; this study confirms previous findings that 40-50% of postoperative or HA-VTE events are diagnosed after hospital discharge. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2007 ◽  
Vol 154 (3) ◽  
pp. 489-494 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Michael Ho ◽  
Stacie A. Luther ◽  
Frederick A. Masoudi ◽  
Indra Gupta ◽  
Elliott Lowy ◽  
...  

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