Background: As a result of recent policy change, National Guard and active-duty Reserve service members now have parity with combat veterans to obtain therapy for symptoms arising as a result of their activation for service on homefront missions.
Observations: Because the authority to treat soldiers serving on homefront missions is new, this article offers suggestions for service delivery to best meet the needs of this population.
Conclusions: Now that National Guard and Reserve component soldiers who have responded to national and local emergencies are eligible for therapy, we need to be prepared to provide these services. In addition to addressing systemic staffing concerns, therapists need to be aware of the unique challenges faced by those who have served on homefront missions.
Background: Many veterans who served in Operation Desert Storm (August 1990 to March 1991) experienced a complex of symptoms of unknown etiology called Gulf War illness (GWI), which significantly impacts the health and quality of life (QOL) and may have contributed to irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).
Methods: We performed a prospective, double-blind placebocontrolled study to determine the efficacy of the multistrain De Simone Formulation probiotic containing 8 strains of bacteria on symptoms of IBS and GWI. Veterans of Operation Desert Storm who had IBS and ≥ 2 nonintestinal symptoms of GWI were included. The primary study endpoint was change in bowel symptom score. The secondary endpoints were mean change in symptoms, QOL, and extra-intestinal and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms.
Results: A total of 101 Gulf War veterans with IBS and GWI were screened at the Veteran Affairs Medical Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. The study was completed by 53 veterans; 47 (89%) were male with a mean (SD) age of 55 (8) years. The probiotic did not improve IBS symptoms or other extra-intestinal symptoms common to IBS and GWI.
Conclusions: Our study did not demonstrate statistically significant improvement in IBS symptoms or QOL after treatment with the probiotic. We also did not find any improvement in symptoms of GWI or PTSD.
Background: Herpes simplex keratitis (HSK) is a common yet potentially blinding condition caused by a primary or reactivated herpetic infection of the cornea. Immune stromal keratitis (ISK), a type of HSK, is classified by a cellular and neovascularization infiltration of the cornea, and patients with ISK may experience low-grade chronic keratitis for years.
Case presentation: A 52-year-old man presented to the eye clinic complaining of a watery and itchy right eye with mildly blurred vision. With consultation from a corneal specialist, the patient was given the presumptive diagnosis of ISK in the right eye based on the unilateral corneal presentation and lack of corneal sensitivity.
Conclusions: ISK presents unilaterally with decreased or absent corneal sensitivity and nonspecific symptoms. It should be at the top of the list in the differential diagnosis in any patient with unilateral corneal edema, opacification, or neovascularization, and the patient should be started on oral antiviral therapy.
Background: It has been shown that veterans and active-duty service members may experience worse mental health outcomes compared with civilians and nonveterans. In addition, transgender veterans and service members face unique challenges. We conducted a systematic review of articles presenting data on mental health outcomes in transgender veterans and active-duty service members. Outcomes examined in this review include symptoms of depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorder, suicidality, substance use, and military sexual trauma.
Observations: In the military, transgender individuals face stigma and discrimination. Transgender veterans and service members have worse mental health outcomes and higher odds of suicidality compared with their cisgender counterparts. Drug and alcohol use disorders are more prevalent among transgender veterans compared with cisgender veterans. Transgender veterans are also more likely to report military sexual trauma than cisgender veterans.
Conclusions: In the literature, evidence exists that transgender veterans and service members experience worse mental health outcomes than their cisgender counterparts. Additional research is required to measure the effect of gender-affirming care on health outcomes among transgender veterans and active-duty service members to better serve this population and provide optimal care.
Background: Veterans with serious mental illness (SMI) are at substantial risk for premature mortality. Engagement in primary care can mitigate these mortality risks. However, veterans with SMI often become disengaged from primary care. The US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) measures and reports at VA facilities primary care engagement among enrolled veterans with SMI. This quarterly metric enables VA facilities to identify targets for quality improvement and track their progress. To inform quality improvement at our VA facility, we sought to identify promising practices for supporting engagement in primary care among veterans with SMI.
Methods: We conducted semistructured telephone interviews from May 2019 through July 2019 with a purposeful sample of key informants at VA facilities with high levels of engagement in primary care among veterans with SMI. All interviews were recorded, summarized using a structured template, and summaries placed into a matrix. An interdisciplinary team reviewed and discussed matrices to identify and build consensus around findings.
Results: We interviewed 18 key informants from 11 VA facilities. The strategies used to engage veterans with SMI fell into 2 general categories: targeted outreach and routine practices. Targeted outreach included proactive, deliberate, systematic approaches for identifying and contacting veterans with SMI who are at risk of disengaging from care. In targeted outreach, veterans were identified and prioritized for outreach independent of any visits with mental health or other VA services. Routine practices included activities embedded in regular clinical workflows at the time of veterans' mental health visits, assessing, and connecting/reconnecting veterans with SMI into primary care. In addition, we identified extensive formal and informal ties between mental health and primary care that facilitated engaging veterans with SMI in primary care.
Conclusions: VA facilities with high levels of primary care engagement among veterans with SMI used extensive engagement strategies, including a diverse array of targeted outreach and routine practices. Intentionally designed organizational structures and processes and facilitating extensive formal and informal ties between mental health and primary care teams supported these efforts. Additional organizational cultural factors were especially relevant to routine practice strategies. The practices we identified should be evaluated empirically for their effects on establishing and maintaining engagement in primary care among veterans with SMI.
Background: Type II hereditary angioedema (HAE) is a rare, genetic disorder characterized by recurring subcutaneous and/or submucosal edema throughout the body and causes significant morbidity and mortality. Lanadelumab is a novel, long-term prophylactic treatment option for HAE and has proven to be an effective treatment option. However, data are limited in patients with type II HAE or aged ≥ 65 years. We present a case of HAE treated with lanadelumab in a patient of an underrepresented population.
Case presentation: An 81-year-old male patient was diagnosed with type II HAE at the age of 75 years. Initially, he described having attacks of abdominal pain weekly that could last up to several days. At age 77 years, he began an on-demand treatment, icatibant, which diminished pain. However, after increasing frequency of attacks, the patient started receiving lanadelumab 300 mg subcutaneously every 2 weeks. He went from requiring on-demand treatment 2 to 3 times per month to once in 6 months.
Conclusions: Long-term prophylaxis is critical for managing HAE patients, but data are limited for patients with type II HAE and aged ≥ 65 years. Our case supports the use of lanadelumab in these populations.
Background: The US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) conducts the largest health professions education program in the country in partnership with academic medical, nursing, and associated health programs across the nation. After World War II, the VA was pressed to meet the increasing population of veterans needing health care and faced challenges in recruiting clinicians.
Observations: The passage of 2 legislative actions, the Servicemen's Readjustment Act and Public Law 79-293, and a key policy memorandum set the foundation for the partnership between the VA and academic medical centers that led to improved medical care for veterans and expansion of health professions education for the VA and the nation.
Conclusions: Since passage of these actions, the VA-academic health professions education partnership has grown to involve 113,000 trainees rotating through 150 VA medical centers annually from more than 1400 colleges and universities.
Background: Cigarette smoking is an independent risk factor for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD). Concomitant use of low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) for coronary artery calcium (CAC) scoring with lung cancer screening (LCS) has been proposed to further determine ASCVD risk and mortality. We aimed to determine the validity of LDCT in identifying CAC and its impact on statin management.
Methods: We conducted a retrospective review from November 2020 to May 2021 of Military Health System (MHS) beneficiaries who received LCS with LDCT and were referred for CAC scoring with electrocardiogram-gated CT. Of the 190 participants initially identified, 170 met study eligibility. The Agatston method was used to score CAC on both scan types.
Results: Participants had a mean (SD) age of 62.1 (4.6) years and were 70.6% male. CAC was seen more on ECG-gated CT compared with LDCT (88% vs 74%, P < .001). The Spearman correlation and Kendall W coefficient of concordance of CAC scores between the 2 scan types was 0.945 (P < .001) and 0.643, respectively. The κ statistic between CAC scores on the 2 different scans was 0.49 (SEκ = 0.048; 95% CI, -0.726-1.706), and the weighted κ statistic was 0.711. Bland-Altman analysis demonstrated a mean bias of 111.45 Agatston units, with limits of agreement between -268.64 and 491.54, suggesting CAC scores on electrocardiogram-gated CT were on average about 111 units higher than those on LDCT. There was a statistically significant proportion of nonstatin participants who met statin criteria based on additional CAC reporting (P < .001).
Conclusions: CAC scores are highly correlated and concordant between LDCT and electrocardiogram-gated CT. Smokers undergoing annual LDCT may benefit from concomitant CAC scoring to help stratify ASCVD risk.