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Exploring the association of care fragmentation and patient ratings of care quality: A mediation analysis of women Veterans' experience with VA care.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.13153Abstract
Objective
To examine the relationship between care fragmentation and patient ratings of care quality and identify potentially actionable mediators.Data sources/study setting
2015 telephone survey of 1395 women Veterans with three or more visits in primary care and/or women's health care in the prior year at 12 Veterans Affairs (VA) medical centers.Study design
Cross-sectional analysis.Data collection/extraction methods
We operationalized lower care fragmentation as receiving VA-only care versus dual use of VA/non-VA care. Participants rated VA care quality (overall care, women's health care (WH), and primary care (PC)) and three aspects of their patient experience (ease of access to services, provider communication, and gender sensitivity of VA environments). We examined associations between care fragmentation and care ratings and applied the Karlson-Holm-Breen decomposition method to test for mediation by aspects of patients' experience.Principal findings
Lower care fragmentation was associated with higher ratings of care quality (odds ratios [95% CI] for overall care: 1.57 [1.14;2.17]; WH: 1.65 [1.20;2.27]; PC: 1.41 [1.10;1.82]). Relationships were mediated by patient-rated provider communication and gender sensitivity (26-54 percent and 14-15 percent of total effects, respectively). Ease of access was associated with higher care ratings (odds ratios [95% CI] for overall care: 2.93 [2.25;3.81]; WH: 2.81 [2.15;3.68]; PC: 2.33 [1.63;3.33], in models with the three types of patient care experiences included), but did not mediate the association of care fragmentation and care ratings.Conclusions
Potential negative effects of care fragmentation on care quality ratings could be mitigated by attention to quality of patient-provider communication and gender sensitivity of VA environments.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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