Military Medical Readiness and Patient Experience with Access to Care.

Beatrice Abiero, Melissa Gliner, Sharon Beamer, Amanda Sackett, Kimberley Marshall-Aiyelawo, Janice Ellison, Teryy McDavid, John de Geus
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Abstract

Objectives: Introduction: Medical readiness is an integral component of total readiness and a prime indicator of an individual's overall fitness to deploy. Promoting medical readiness is the prime directive for military medical departments; however, there are few studies evaluating specific factors of care delivery that will improve medical readiness. In this study, we evaluated one of the common patient perceptions that access to routine and specialty care will have a positive effect on military medical readiness. Surprisingly, there appeared to be a reverse relationship between a patient's perception of access to care and the correlation to their medical readiness.

Materials and methods: This study uses the Joint Outpatient Experience Survey data of Army active duty soldiers (December 2017 through May 2018) to investigate the relationship between access to care and medical readiness. Medical readiness scores were examined a month before and a month after a medical encounter. Medical Readiness Categories (MRC) were collected from the Army Medical Operational Data System Mainframe. Respondents of the survey were matched to MRC data. Comparisons were made using chi-square tests and Wilcoxon rank-sum non-parametric tests to determine whether there were differences in readiness and patient experience ratings before and after the encounter. Logistic regressions were also conducted to predict the odds of non-readiness based on the type of health care visit.

Results: Soldiers who were medically non-ready were more likely to be above age 35 years or have specialty care encounters. Results indicated those meeting all medical readiness requirements or having minor medical issues that could be resolved quickly, generally rated access to care slightly lower compared to those who were medically non-ready. Musculoskeletal Injuries (MSKIs) are the leading cause of medical non-readiness. As a result, this study explored access to care for MSKIs. Although there were no statistical differences in access ratings for those with MSKIs compared to those without MSKIs, there were statistically significant differences in self-reported health. Individuals with MSKIs tended to report poorer health status. Those with specialty care visits had 1.79 times significantly greater odds (p is less than .05) of being non-medically ready compared to those with primary care. For visits related to MSKI (e.g., physical medicine, orthopedic, or chiropractic etc.), those with an orthopedic or occupational therapy visit had 1.25 and 1.59 significantly greater odds (p is less than .05) of being considered not medically ready compared to all other MSKI related visits before the encounter. However, after the encounter, those with orthopedic care had significantly higher odds of improved readiness.

Conclusions: Findings from this study help contextualize who is considered medically non-ready as well as differences in access to care experiences for this group. The lowest scoring areas for improving access to care include ease of making appointment, time between scheduling an appointment and the visit, and being seen past the scheduled time. Given that musculoskeletal injuries tend to require long term specialized treatments such as physical and occupational therapy, findings from the logistic regressions suggest that access and adherence to such treatments, particularly for orthopedic care, are helpful in improving medical readiness.

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军队医疗准备和病人获得护理的经验。
前言:医疗准备是全面准备的一个组成部分,也是个人整体适合部署的主要指标。加强医疗准备是军队医疗部门的首要任务;然而,很少有研究评估具体因素的护理提供,将提高医疗准备。在本研究中,我们评估了一种常见的患者观念,即获得常规和专业护理将对军事医疗准备产生积极影响。令人惊讶的是,患者对获得护理的感知与他们的医疗准备程度之间似乎存在相反的关系。材料与方法:本研究利用2017年12月至2018年5月陆军现役军人门诊联合体验调查数据,探讨获得医疗服务与医疗准备的关系。医疗准备得分分别在就诊前一个月和就诊后一个月进行检查。医疗准备类别(MRC)从陆军医疗操作数据系统主机收集。调查对象与MRC的数据相匹配。采用卡方检验和Wilcoxon秩和非参数检验进行比较,以确定就诊前后的准备程度和患者体验评分是否存在差异。还进行了逻辑回归,以预测基于医疗保健访问类型的不准备的几率。结果:医学上未做好准备的士兵年龄在35岁以上或有专科护理经历的可能性更大。结果表明,那些满足所有医疗准备要求或有可以迅速解决的轻微医疗问题的人,与那些医疗上没有准备好的人相比,一般认为获得护理的机会略低。肌肉骨骼损伤(MSKIs)是医疗不准备的主要原因。因此,本研究探讨了mski患者获得护理的途径。虽然与没有MSKIs的人相比,MSKIs患者的访问评级没有统计学差异,但自我报告的健康状况有统计学显著差异。mski患者往往报告较差的健康状况。与接受初级保健的患者相比,接受专科护理的患者未做好医疗准备的几率(p < 0.05)显著增加1.79倍。对于与MSKI相关的就诊(例如,物理医学、骨科或脊椎按摩等),与就诊前所有其他与MSKI相关的就诊相比,骨科或职业治疗就诊的患者被认为未做好医学准备的几率分别为1.25和1.59 (p < 0.05)。然而,在遭遇之后,那些接受矫形治疗的人有明显更高的机会改善准备。结论:本研究的发现有助于了解哪些人被认为是医学上未准备好,以及这一群体在获得护理经验方面的差异。在改善获得医疗服务方面得分最低的领域包括预约的便利性、安排预约和就诊之间的时间以及超过预定时间的就诊情况。鉴于肌肉骨骼损伤往往需要长期的专门治疗,如物理和职业治疗,逻辑回归的结果表明,获得和坚持这种治疗,特别是骨科护理,有助于提高医疗准备。
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