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Citation

Miller, Katherine E. M.; Van Houtven, Courtney H.; Kent, Erin E.; Gilleskie, Donna B.; Holmes, Mark; Smith, Valerie; & Stearns, Sally C. (2023). Short-Term Effects of Comprehensive Caregiver Supports on Caregiver Outcomes. Health Services Research, 58(1), 140-153. PMCID: PMC10501334

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To estimate the association of the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) Program of Comprehensive Assistance for Family Caregivers (PCAFC) implemented in 2011 with caregiver health and health care use.
DATA SOURCES: VHA claims and electronic health records from May 2009-May 2018.
STUDY DESIGN: Using a retrospective, pre-post study design with inverse probability of treatment weights to address selection into treatment, we examine the association of PCAFC on caregivers who are Veterans: (1) outpatient primary, specialty, and mental health care visits; (2) probability of uncontrolled hypertension and anxiety/depression; and, (3) VHA health care costs. We compare outcomes for caregivers approved for PCAFC (treatment) to caregivers denied PCAFC (comparison).
DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS: n/a
PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In the year pre-application, we observe similar probabilities of having any VHA primary care (~36%), VHA specialty care (~24%), and VHA or VHA-purchased mental health care (~22%) for treatment and comparison caregivers. In year post-application, treated caregivers had a 5.89 percentage point larger probability of any outpatient VHA primary care (p=0.002) and 4.34 percentage points larger probability of any outpatient mental health care use (p=0.014). Post-application, probabilities of having uncontrolled hypertension or diagnosed anxiety/depression was higher for both treated and comparison groups. In the second year post-application, treated caregivers had a 1.88 percentage points larger probability of uncontrolled hypertension (p=0.019) and 4.68 percentage points larger probability of diagnosed anxiety/depression (predicted probabilities: treated=0.30; comparison = 0.25; p=0.005). We find no evidence of differences in VHA total costs by PCAFC status.
CONCLUSIONS: Our findings that PCAFC enrollment is associated with increased health care diagnosis and service use may reflect improved access for previously unmet needs in the population of Veteran caregivers for Veterans in PCAFC. The costs and value of these increases can be weighed against other effects of the program to inform national policies supporting caregivers.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.14038

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2023

Journal Title

Health Services Research

Author(s)

Miller, Katherine E. M.
Van Houtven, Courtney H.
Kent, Erin E.
Gilleskie, Donna B.
Holmes, Mark
Smith, Valerie
Stearns, Sally C.

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC10501334

Data Set/Study

Veterans Health Administration (VHA) Program of Comprehensive Assistance for Family Caregivers (PCAFC)

Continent/Country

United States of America

State

Nonspecific

ORCiD

Gilleskie - 0000-0002-1278-7707