2067. VA Emergency Healthcare
for Women: Condition – Critical or Stable?
DL Washington, VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, C
Goldzweig, VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, B Simon, VA
Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, EM Yano, VA Greater Los Angeles
Healthcare System
Objectives: Women are a
small but rapidly growing segment of the veteran population, with estimates that
they will comprise 10% of VA users within the next decade. The provision of
high-quality, comprehensive services for women veterans has been promoted
through legislation that authorized VA to provide gender-specific services.
Though VA facilities have reconfigured themselves to address this legislative
mandate, the challenge of providing comprehensive care to a group that is an
extreme minority within VA may leave gaps in the delivery of necessary
healthcare services.
Methods: In a VA-wide
survey of all facilities serving 400 or more women veterans, we assessed the
availability of a women’s healthcare specialist for emergency gynecologic
problems (emergency-GYN) and emergency mental health conditions specific to
women (EWMH). Facility-level
characteristics were available for 118 respondents from administrative data
sources, a chief-of-staff and a senior clinician survey.
Results: Emergency-GYN
expertise was usually available at all times for 39.8% of sites, and during
usual clinic hours only for 24.6% of sites. An EWMH-specialist was available at
all times for 51.7% of sites, and during usual clinic hours only for 31.0% of
sites. Emergency-GYN expertise and EWMH-specialists were not usually
available, even during clinic hours, for 35.6% and 17.2% of sites, respectively.
Having a separate women’s health clinic and lower local managed care
penetration were independently associated with emergency-GYN (p=.033) and EWMH
(p=.024) availability, respectively. Organizational complexity, tracking of
women veterans’ satisfaction, perceived women’s health resource sufficiency,
having designated providers for women in general primary care and mental health
clinics, and having a women’s health training program were not independently
associated.
Conclusions: Though many
VA facilities have the available expertise to provide emergency care to women
veterans, a significant proportion do not, particularly for after-hours care.
Sites in areas with less managed care penetration are more likely to have
EWMH availability, perhaps filling a niche for services less widely available in
their local private sector.
Impact: Further work is needed to determine how clinicians respond when such expertise is needed. Options for addressing this gap include internal development of women’s health expertise, and tele-medicine access to experts to aid in emergency women’s healthcare decision-making.