4 results on '"RIGGS, KEVIN R."'
Search Results
2. Insights for conducting large-scale surveys with veterans who have experienced homelessness.
- Author
-
deRussy, Aerin J., Jones, Audrey L., Austin, Erika L., Gordon, Adam J., Gelberg, Lillian, Gabrielian, Sonya E., Riggs, Kevin R., Blosnich, John R., Montgomery, Ann Elizabeth, Holmes, Sally K., Varley, Allyson L., Hoge, April E., and Kertesz, Stefan G.
- Subjects
HOMELESSNESS ,HOMELESS veterans ,VETERANS ,EMERGENCY housing ,POSTAL service ,SOCIAL marginality - Abstract
Surveys of underserved patient populations are needed to guide quality improvement efforts but are challenging to implement. The goal of this study was to describe recruitment and response to a national survey of Veterans with homeless experience (VHE). We randomly selected 14,340 potential participants from 26 U. S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities. A survey contract organization verified/updated addresses from VA administrative data with a commercial address database, then attempted to recruit VHE through 4 mailings, telephone follow-up, and a $10 incentive. We used mixed-effects logistic regressions to test for differences in survey response by patient characteristics. The response rate was 40.2% (n = 5766). Addresses from VA data elicited a higher response rate than addresses from commercial sources (46.9% vs 31.2%, p <.001). Residential addresses elicited a higher response rate than business addresses (43.8% vs 26.2%, p <.001). Compared to non-respondents, respondents were older, less likely to have mental health, drug, or alcohol conditions, and had fewer VA housing and emergency service visits. Collectively, our results indicated a national mailed survey approach is feasible and successful for reaching VA patients who have recently experienced homelessness. These findings offer insight into how health systems can obtain perspectives of socially disadvantaged groups. Abbreviations: H-PACTS: Homeless-Patient Aligned Care Teams; SHEP: Survey of Healthcare Experiences of Patients; SRG: Strategic Research Group; USPS: United States Postal Service; VA: U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs; VHE: veterans with homeless experience [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. What do Veterans with homeless experience want us to know that we are not asking? A qualitative content analysis of comments from a national survey of healthcare experience.
- Author
-
Varley, Allyson L., Hoge, April, Riggs, Kevin R., deRussy, Aerin, Jones, Audrey L., Austin, Erika L., Gabrielian, Sonya, Gelberg, Lillian, Gordon, Adam J., Blosnich, John R., Montgomery, Ann Elizabeth, and Kertesz, Stefan G.
- Subjects
CHRONIC pain ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,MEDICAL care ,QUANTITATIVE research ,PSYCHOLOGY of veterans ,EXPERIENCE ,QUALITATIVE research ,SURVEYS ,PRIMARY health care ,SOCIAL context ,RESEARCH funding ,HEALTH behavior ,QUALITY of life ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HOMELESSNESS ,CONTENT analysis ,THEMATIC analysis ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors - Abstract
Surveys of people who experience homelessness can portray their life and healthcare experiences with a level of statistical precision; however, few have explored how the very same surveys can deliver qualitative insights as well. In responding to surveys, people experiencing homelessness can use the margins to highlight health and social concerns that investigators failed to anticipate that standard question batteries miss. This study describes the unprompted comments of a large national survey of Veterans with homeless experiences. The Primary Care Quality‐Homeless Services Tailoring (PCQ‐HOST) survey presented 85 close‐ended items to solicit social and psychological experiences, health conditions, and patient ratings of primary care. Amongst 5377 Veterans responding to the paper survey, 657 (12%) offered 1933 unprompted comments across nearly all domains queried. Using a team‐based content analysis approach, we coded and organised survey comments by survey domain, and identified emergent themes. Respondents used comments for many purposes. They noted when questions called for more nuanced responses than those allowed, especially 'sometimes' or 'not applicable' on sensitive questions, such as substance use, where recovery status was not queried. On such matters, the options of 'no' and 'yes' failed to capture important contextual and historical information that mattered to respondents, such as being in recovery. Respondents also elaborated on negative and positive care experiences, often naming specific clinics or clinicians. This study highlights the degree to which members of vulnerable populations, who participate in survey research, want researchers to know the reasons behind their responses and topics (like chronic pain and substance use disorders) that could benefit from open‐ended response options. Understanding patient perspectives can help improve care. Quantitative data from surveys can provide statistical precision but may miss key patient perspectives. The content that patients write into survey margins can highlight shortfalls of a survey and point towards future areas of inquiry. Veterans with homeless experience want to provide additional detail about their lives and care experiences in ways that transcend the boundaries of close‐ended survey questions. Questions on substance use proved especially likely to draw comments that went beyond the permitted response options, often to declare that the respondent was in recovery. Respondents frequently clarified aspects of their care experiences related to pain, pain care, transportation and experiences of homelessness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Characteristics Associated With Unsheltered Status Among Veterans.
- Author
-
Kertesz, Stefan G., DeRussy, Aerin J., Riggs, Kevin R., Hoge, April E., Varley, Allyson L., Montgomery, Ann Elizabeth, Austin, Erika L., Blosnich, John R., Jones, Audrey L., Gabrielian, Sonya E., Gelberg, Lillian, Gordon, Adam J., and Richman, Joshua S.
- Subjects
- *
HOMELESS veterans , *VETERANS , *FINANCIAL stress , *POOR communities , *HOMELESSNESS , *SOCIAL support , *HOUSING - Abstract
Introduction: Unsheltered homelessness is a strongly debated public issue. The study objective is to identify personal and community characteristics associated with unsheltered homelessness in veterans and to test for interactions between these characteristics.Methods: In a 2018 national survey of U.S. veterans with homeless experiences; investigators assessed unsheltered time; psychosocial characteristics; and community measures of shelter access, weather, and rental affordability. Associations between these characteristics and unsheltered status were tested in July-August 2020. This study also tested whether the count of personal risk factors interacted with community characteristics in predicting unsheltered status.Results: Among 5,406 veterans, 481 (8.9%) reported ≥7 nights unsheltered over 6 months. This group was more likely to report criminal justice history, poor social support, medical and drug problems, financial hardship, and being unmarried. Their communities had poorer shelter access and warmer temperatures. The likelihood of unsheltered experience rose with risk factor count from 2.0% (0-1) to 8.4% (2-3) and to 24.2% (4-11). Interaction tests showed that the increase was greater for communities with warmer weather and higher rents (p<0.05).Conclusions: Among veterans experiencing homelessness, unsheltered experiences correlate with individual and community risk factors. Communities wishing to address unsheltered homelessness will need to consider action at both levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.