36 results on '"Lanto AB"'
Search Results
2. THE EFFECT OF ACTIVE CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE ON HEALTH AND FUNCTIONAL STATUS: AN AMBULATORY NEEDS ASSESSMENT
- Author
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Chang, DS, Chernof, BA, Lanto, AB, Yano, EM, Lee, ML, and Rubenstein, LV
- Published
- 1996
3. Yield of practice-based depression screening in VA primary care settings.
- Author
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Yano EM, Chaney EF, Campbell DG, Klap R, Simon BF, Bonner LM, Lanto AB, Rubenstein LV, Yano, Elizabeth M, Chaney, Edmund F, Campbell, Duncan G, Klap, Ruth, Simon, Barbara F, Bonner, Laura M, Lanto, Andrew B, and Rubenstein, Lisa V
- Abstract
Background: Many patients who should be treated for depression are missed without effective routine screening in primary care (PC) settings. Yearly depression screening by PC staff is mandated in the VA, yet little is known about the expected yield from such screening when administered on a practice-wide basis.Objective: We characterized the yield of practice-based screening in diverse PC settings, as well as the care needs of those assessed as having depression.Design: Baseline enrollees in a group randomized trial of implementation of collaborative care for depression.Participants: Randomly sampled patients with a scheduled PC appointment in ten VA primary care clinics spanning five states.Measurements: PHQ-2 screening followed by the full PHQ-9 for screen positives, with standardized sociodemographic and health status questions.Results: Practice-based screening of 10,929 patients yielded 20.1% positive screens, 60% of whom were assessed as having probable major depression based on the PHQ-9 (11.8% of all screens) (n = 1,313). In total, 761 patients with probable major depression completed the baseline assessment. Comorbid mental illnesses (e.g., anxiety, PTSD) were highly prevalent. Medical comorbidities were substantial, including chronic lung disease, pneumonia, diabetes, heart attack, heart failure, cancer and stroke. Nearly one-third of the depressed PC patients reported recent suicidal ideation (based on the PHQ-9). Sexual dysfunction was also common (73.3%), being both longstanding (95.1% with onset >6 months) and frequently undiscussed and untreated (46.7% discussed with any health care provider in past 6 months).Conclusions: Practice-wide survey-based depression screening yielded more than twice the positive-screen rate demonstrated through chart-based VA performance measures. The substantial level of comorbid physical and mental illness among PC patients precludes solo management by either PC or mental health (MH) specialists. PC practice- and provider-level guideline adherence is problematic without systems-level solutions supporting adequate MH assessment, PC treatment and, when needed, appropriate MH referral. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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4. Addressing patients' concerns about pain management and addiction risks.
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Goebel JR, Sherbourne CD, Asch SM, Meredith L, Cohen AB, Hagenmaier E, Lanto AB, Simon B, Rubenstein LV, Shugarman LR, and Lorenz KA
- Abstract
Fear of engendering addiction is frequently reported as both a provider and a patient barrier to effective pain management. In this study, a clinical scenario ascertained nursing staff members' usual practice in addressing addiction fears for patients with concerns about the addictive potential of pain medication. One hundred forty-five Veterans Health Administration nursing staff members from eight ambulatory care sites were queried to identify variables associated with proclivity to address patient fears about addiction risks in a population where pain is prevalent and the risk for substance abuse is high. Regarding addressing addiction concerns, 66% of nursing staff were very likely, 16% somewhat likely, 9% unsure, 6% somewhat unlikely, and 2% very unlikely to take action. Health technicians were less likely to address addiction concerns than registered or licensed vocational nurses (odds ratio [OR] 0.116; p=.004). Nursing staff with more years' experience (OR 1.070; p=.005) and higher levels of self-efficacy/confidence (OR 1.380; p=.001) were more likely to engage in discussions related to addiction risks. Targeted efforts to improve pain management activities should focus on retaining experienced nursing staff in initial assessment positions and improving the skills and confidence of less experienced and less skilled staff. © 2010 by the American Society for Pain Management Nursing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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5. Smokers' interest in quitting and services received: using practice information to plan quality improvement and policy for smoking cessation.
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Sherman SE, Yano EM, Lanto AB, Simon BF, Rubenstein LV, Sherman, Scott E, Yano, Elizabeth M, Lanto, Andy B, Simon, Barbara F, and Rubenstein, Lisa V
- Abstract
Given the prevalence of smoking, its impact, and the benefits of cessation, helping smokers quit should be a top priority for health care organizations. To restructure health care delivery and guide future policy, the authors used baseline survey data from an 18-site Veterans Health Administration group randomized trial to assess the level of interest in quitting smoking for a practice population and determine what smoking cessation services they reported receiving. Among 1941 current smokers, 55% did not intend to quit in the next 6 months, and the remainder intended to quit in the next month (13%) to 6 months (32%). Forty-five percent reported a quit attempt in the prior year. While nearly two thirds of smokers reported being counseled about cessation within the past year, only 29% were referred to a cessation program, and 25% received a prescription for nicotine patches. Tobacco control efforts within this population should focus on increasing the rate of assisting patients with quitting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
6. Smoking cessation care received by veterans with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
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Sherman SE, Lanto AB, Nield M, and Yano EM
- Abstract
Smoking is the main cause of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and smoking cessation is the only effective intervention to slow its progression. We examined whether smokers with COPD received more cessation services than smokers without COPD. Current smokers from 18 Veterans Health Administration primary care clinics completed baseline and 12 month follow-up surveys (baseline n = 1,941; 12 month n = 1,080), composed of validated questions on smoking habits, history, and attitudes; health/functional status; and sociodemographics. Both at baseline and 12 month follow-up, smokers with COPD were more likely to report that they had been advised to quit, prescribed nicotine patches, or referred to a smoking cessation program within the last year. However, the rate of quitting smoking was the same for smokers with COPD and smokers without COPD. The increase in cessation services received by smokers with COPD was noted primarily among smokers not interested in quitting. New approaches may be required, particularly to help smokers not interested in quitting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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7. Health habit counseling amidst competing demands: effects of patient health habits and visit characteristics.
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Chernof BA, Sherman SE, Lanto AB, Lee ML, Yano EM, Rubenstein LV, Chernof, B A, Sherman, S E, Lanto, A B, Lee, M L, Yano, E M, and Rubenstein, L V
- Published
- 1999
8. Reduced cerebral glucose metabolism in asymptomatic subjects at risk for Huntington??s disease
- Author
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Mazziotta, JC, primary, Phelps, ME, additional, Pahl, JJ, additional, Huang, SC, additional, Baxter, LR, additional, Riege, WH, additional, Hoffman, JM, additional, Kuhl, DE, additional, Lanto, AB, additional, and Wapenski, JA, additional
- Published
- 1987
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9. Ethnic disparities in the use of nicotine replacement therapy for smoking cessation in an equal access health care system.
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Fu SS, Sherman SE, Yano EM, van Ryn M, Lanto AB, Joseph AM, Fu, Steven S, Sherman, Scott E, Yano, Elizabeth M, van Ryn, Michelle, Lanto, Andy B, and Joseph, Anne M
- Abstract
Purpose: To examine ethnic variations in the use of nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) in an equal access health care system.Design: Cross-sectional survey.Setting: Eighteen Veterans Affairs medical and ambulatory care centers.Subjects: A cohort of male current smokers (n = 1606).Measures: Use of NRT (nicotine patch or nicotine gum), ethnicity, sociodemographics, health status, smoking-related history, and facility prescribing policy.Results: Overall, only 34% of African-American and 26% of Hispanic smokers have ever used NRT as a cessation aid compared with 50% of white smokers. In the past year, African-American smokers were most likely to have attempted quitting. During a serious past-year quit attempt, however African-American and Hispanic smokers reported lower rates of NRT use than white smokers (20% vs. 22% vs. 34%, respectively, p = .001). In multivariate analyses, ethnicity was independently associated with NRT use during a past-year quit attempt. Compared with white smokers, African-American (adjusted odds ratio, .53; 95% confidence interval, .34-.83) and Hispanic (adjusted odds ratio, .55; 95% confidence interval, .28-1.08) smokers were less likely to use NRT.Conclusions: Assessment of variations in use of NRT demonstrates that African-American and Hispanic smokers are less likely to use NRT during quit attempts. Future research is needed on the relative contributions of patient, physician, and system features to gaps in guideline implementation to provide treatment for ethnic minority smokers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2005
10. Depression complexity prevalence and outcomes among veterans affairs patients in integrated primary care.
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Campbell DG, Lombardero A, English I, Waltz TJ, Hoggatt KJ, Simon BF, Lanto AB, Simon A, Rubenstein LV, and Chaney EF
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- Depression epidemiology, Depression therapy, Humans, Prevalence, Primary Health Care, United States epidemiology, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Alcoholism, Mental Health Services, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic complications, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic therapy, Veterans psychology
- Abstract
Introduction: The Veterans Health Administration (VA) Primary Care-Mental Health Integration (PC-MHI) initiative targets depression (MDD), anxiety/posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and alcohol misuse (AM) for care improvement. In primary care, case finding often relies on depression screening. Whereas clinical practice guidelines solely inform management of depression, minimal information exists to guide treatment when psychiatric symptom clusters coexist. We provide descriptive clinical information for care planners about VA PC patients with depression alone, depression plus alcohol misuse, and depression with complex psychiatric comorbidities (PTSD and/or probable bipolar disorder)., Method: We examined data from a VA study that used a visit-based sampling procedure to screen 10,929 VA PC patients for depression; 761 patients with probable major depression completed baseline measures of health and care engagement. Follow-up assessments were completed at 7 months., Results: At baseline, 53% of patients evidenced mental health conditions in addition to depression; 10% had concurrent AM, and 43% had psychiatrically complex depression (either with or without AM). Compared with patients with depression alone or depression with AM, those with psychiatrically complex depression evinced longer standing and more severe mood disturbance, higher likelihood of suicidal ideation, higher unemployment, and higher levels of polypharmacy. Baseline depression complexity predicted worse mental health status and functioning at follow-up., Discussion: A substantial proportion of VA primary care patients with depression presented with high medical multimorbidity and elevated safety concerns. Psychiatrically complex depression predicted lower treatment effectiveness, suggesting that PC-MHI interventions should co-ordinate and individualize care for these patients. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2022
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11. Stigma Predicts Treatment Preferences and Care Engagement Among Veterans Affairs Primary Care Patients with Depression.
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Campbell DG, Bonner LM, Bolkan CR, Lanto AB, Zivin K, Waltz TJ, Klap R, Rubenstein LV, and Chaney EF
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- Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology, Patient Acceptance of Health Care psychology, Patient Preference psychology, Primary Health Care, Social Stigma, Veterans psychology
- Abstract
Background: Whereas stigma regarding mental health concerns exists, the evidence for stigma as a depression treatment barrier among patients in Veterans Affairs (VA) primary care (PC) is mixed., Purpose: This study tests whether stigma, defined as depression label avoidance, predicted patients' preferences for depression treatment providers, patients' prospective engagement in depression care, and care quality., Methods: We conducted cross-sectional and prospective analyses of existing data from 761 VA PC patients with probable major depression., Results: Relative to low-stigma patients, those with high stigma were less likely to prefer treatment from mental health specialists. In prospective controlled analyses, high stigma predicted lower likelihood of the following: taking medications for mood, treatment by mental health specialists, treatment for emotional concerns in PC, and appropriate depression care., Conclusions: High stigma is associated with lower preferences for care from mental health specialists and confers risk for minimal depression treatment engagement.
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- 2016
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12. Who is responsible for what tasks within primary care: Perceived task allocation among primary care providers and interdisciplinary team members.
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Edwards ST, Rubenstein LV, Meredith LS, Schmidt Hackbarth N, Stockdale SE, Cordasco KM, Lanto AB, Roos PJ, and Yano EM
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- Attitude of Health Personnel, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Physician Assistants, Physicians, Primary Care, Self Care, United States, Patient Care Team, Patient-Centered Care, Primary Health Care
- Abstract
Background: Unclear roles in interdisciplinary primary care teams can impede optimal team-based care. We assessed perceived task allocation among primary care providers (PCPs) and staff during implementation of a new patient-centered care model in Veterans Affairs (VA) primary care practices., Methods: We performed a cross-sectional survey of PCPs and primary care staff (registered nurses (RNs), licensed practical/vocational nurses (LPNs), and medical assistants/clerks (MAs)) in 23 primary care practices within one VA region. We asked subjects whether PCPs performed each of 14 common primary care tasks alone, or relied upon staff for help. Tasks included gathering preventive service history, disease screening, evaluating patients and making treatment decisions, intervening on lifestyle factors, educating patients about self-care activities and medications, refilling prescriptions, receiving and resolving patient messages, completing forms, tracking diagnostic data, referral tracking, and arranging home health care. We then performed multivariable regression to determine predictors of perceived PCP reliance on staff for each task., Results: 162 PCPs and 257 staff members responded, a 60% response rate. For 12/14 tasks, fewer than 50% of PCPs reported relying on staff for help. For all 14 tasks, over 85% of RNs reported they were relied upon. For 12/14 tasks, over 50% of LPNs reported they were relied on, while for 5/14 tasks a majority of MAs reported being relied upon. Nurse practitioners and physician assistants (NP/PAs) reported relying on staff less than physicians., Conclusions: Early in the implementation of a team-based primary care model, most PCPs perceived they were solely responsible for most clinical tasks. RNs, and LPNs felt they were relied upon for most of the same tasks, while medical assistants/clerks reported being relied on for fewer tasks. Better understanding of optimal inter-professional team task allocation in primary care is needed., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2015
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13. Veterans with depression in primary care: provider preferences, matching, and care satisfaction.
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Waltz TJ, Campbell DG, Kirchner JE, Lombardero A, Bolkan C, Zivin K, Lanto AB, Chaney EF, and Rubenstein LV
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- Comorbidity, Depression complications, Depression psychology, Humans, Primary Health Care trends, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic complications, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Depression therapy, Patient Preference, Patient Satisfaction, Primary Health Care statistics & numerical data, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic therapy, Veterans Health
- Abstract
Primary care is often the first point of care for individuals with depression. Depressed patients often have comorbid alcohol use disorder (AUD) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Understanding variations in treatment preferences and care satisfaction in this population can improve care planning and outcomes. The design involved a cross-sectional comparison of veterans screening positive for depression. Veterans receiving primary care during the previous year were contacted (n = 10, 929) and were screened for depression using the PHQ-2/PHQ-9. Those with probable depression (n = 761) underwent a comprehensive assessment including screens for AUD and PTSD, treatment provider preferences, treatments received, and satisfaction with care. Treatment provider preferences differed based on specific mental health comorbidities, and satisfaction with care was associated with receipt of preferred care. Depressed veterans with comorbid PTSD were more likely to prefer care from more than one provider type (e.g., a psychiatrist and a primary care provider) and were more likely to receive treatment that matched their preferences than veterans without comorbid PTSD. Veterans receiving full or partial treatment matches affirmed satisfaction with care at higher rates, and veterans with comorbid PTSD were least satisfied when care did not match their preferences. Patient satisfaction with care is an increasingly important focus for health care systems. This study found significant variations in depressed patients' satisfaction with care in terms of treatment matching, particularly among those with comorbid PTSD. Delivery of care that matches patient treatment preferences is likely to improve depressed patient's satisfaction with the care provided. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2014
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14. Prevalence and correlates of smoking status among veterans affairs primary care patients with probable major depressive disorder.
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Lombardero A, Campbell DG, Harris KJ, Chaney EF, Lanto AB, and Rubenstein LV
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- Aged, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Medication Adherence, Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Severity of Illness Index, Social Support, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology, United States epidemiology, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans psychology, Depressive Disorder, Major epidemiology, Primary Health Care, Smoking epidemiology, Veterans statistics & numerical data
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In an attempt to guide planning and optimize outcomes for population-specific smoking cessation efforts, the present study examined smoking prevalence and the demographic, clinical and psychosocial characteristics associated with smoking among a sample of Veterans Affairs primary care patients with probable major depression. Survey data were collected between 2003 and 2004 from 761 patients with probable major depression who attended one of 10 geographically dispersed VA primary care clinics. Current smoking prevalence was 39.8%. Relative to nonsmokers with probable major depression, bivariate comparisons revealed that current smokers had higher depression severity, drank more heavily, and were more likely to have comorbid PTSD. Smokers with probable major depression were also more likely than nonsmokers with probable major depression to have missed a health care appointment and to have missed medication doses in the previous 5months. Smokers were more amenable than non-smokers to depression treatment and diagnosis, and they reported more frequent visits to a mental health specialist and less social support. Alcohol abuse and low levels of social support were significant concurrent predictors of smoking status in controlled multivariable logistic regression. In conclusion, smoking prevalence was high among primary care patients with probable major depression, and these smokers reported a range of psychiatric and psychosocial characteristics with potential to complicate systems-level smoking cessation interventions., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2014
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15. Help-seeking from clergy and spiritual counselors among veterans with depression and PTSD in primary care.
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Bonner LM, Lanto AB, Bolkan C, Watson GS, Campbell DG, Chaney EF, Zivin K, and Rubenstein LV
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- Aged, Comorbidity, Depressive Disorder, Major therapy, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Religion and Psychology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic therapy, United States epidemiology, Clergy, Counseling, Depressive Disorder, Major epidemiology, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Primary Health Care, Spiritual Therapies, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology, Veterans psychology
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Little is known about the prevalence or predictors of seeking help for depression and PTSD from spiritual counselors and clergy. We describe openness to and actual help-seeking from spiritual counselors among primary care patients with depression. We screened consecutive VA primary care patients for depression; 761 Veterans with probable major depression participated in telephone surveys (at baseline, 7 months, and 18 months). Participants were asked about (1) openness to seeking help for emotional problems from spiritual counselors/clergy and (2) actual contact with spiritual counselors/clergy in the past 6 months. At baseline, almost half of the participants, 359 (47.2%), endorsed being "very" or "somewhat likely" to seek help for emotional problems from spiritual counselors; 498 (65.4%) were open to a primary care provider, 486 (63.9%) to a psychiatrist, and 409 (66.5%) to another type of mental health provider. Ninety-one participants (12%) reported actual spiritual counselor/clergy consultation. Ninety-five (10.3%) participants reported that their VA providers had recently asked them about spiritual support; the majority of these found this discussion helpful. Participants with current PTSD symptoms, and those with a mental health visit in the past 6 months, were more likely to report openness to and actual help-seeking from clergy. Veterans with depression and PTSD are amenable to receiving help from spiritual counselors/clergy and other providers. Integration of spiritual counselors/clergy into care teams may be helpful to Veterans with PTSD. Training of such providers to address PTSD specifically may also be desirable.
- Published
- 2013
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16. Alcohol problems as a risk factor for postdisaster depressed mood among U.S. veterans.
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Heslin KC, Stein JA, Dobalian A, Simon B, Lanto AB, Yano EM, and Rubenstein LV
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Alcoholism psychology, Depression psychology, Earthquakes, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Alcoholism complications, Depression etiology, Disasters, Veterans psychology
- Abstract
Alcohol problems may impede adaptive, proactive responses to disaster-related injury and loss, thus prolonging the adverse impact of disasters on mental health. Previous work suggests that veterans of the U.S. armed forces have a relatively high prevalence of alcohol misuse and other psychiatric disorders. This is the first study to estimate the impact of predisaster alcohol problems on postdisaster depressed mood among veterans, using data that were collected before and after the 1994 Northridge, CA, earthquake. The authors assessed the impact of alcohol problems on postdisaster depressed mood in an existing clinical cohort of veterans who experienced the 6.7-magnitude earthquake that struck Northridge in January 1994. One to 3 months after the disaster, interviewers contacted participants by telephone to administer a follow-up questionnaire based on a survey that had been done preearthquake. Postearthquake data were obtained on 1,144 male veterans for whom there were preearthquake data. We tested a predictive path model of the relationships between latent variables for predisaster alcohol problems, functional limitations, and depressed mood on latent variables representing postdisaster "quake impact" and depressive mood. Results showed that veterans who had more alcohol problems before the earthquake experienced more earthquake-related harms and severely depressed mood after the earthquake, compared with those who had fewer alcohol problems. Programs serving veterans with a high prevalence of alcohol problems should consider designing disaster response protocols to locate and assist these patients in the aftermath of disasters., ((PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2013 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2013
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17. Relationships between mood and employment over time among depressed VA primary care patients.
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Zivin K, Campbell DG, Lanto AB, Chaney EF, Bolkan C, Bonner LM, Miller EM, Valenstein M, Waltz TJ, and Rubenstein LV
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Primary Health Care, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Young Adult, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology, Employment psychology, Veterans psychology
- Abstract
Objective: Associations between depression, productivity and work loss have been reported, yet few studies have examined relationships between longitudinal depression status and employment continuity. We assessed these relationships among Veterans of conventional working ages., Methods: We used longitudinal survey data from Veterans receiving primary care in 1 of 10 Veterans Health Administration primary care practices in five states. Our sample included 516 participants with nine-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) scores indicating probable major depression (PHQ-9≥10) at baseline and who completed either the 7-month follow-up survey or follow-up surveys at both 7 and 18 months postbaseline. We examined relationships between depression persistence and employment status using multinomial logistic regression models., Results: Although general employment rates remained stable (21%-23%), improved depression status was associated with an increased likelihood of becoming employed over 7 months among those who were both depressed and nonemployed at baseline. Improvements in depression status starting at 7 months and continuing through 18 months were associated with remaining employed over the 18-month period, relative to those who were depressed throughout the same time frame., Conclusions: Given the pressing need to prevent socioeconomic deterioration in the increasing population of conventional working-aged Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom Veterans, further attention to the depression/employment relationship is urgently needed., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2012
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18. Impact of the Northridge earthquake on the mental health of veterans: results from a panel study.
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Dobalian A, Stein JA, Heslin KC, Riopelle D, Venkatesh B, Lanto AB, Simon B, Yano EM, and Rubenstein LV
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, California, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Social Class, Stress, Psychological, Young Adult, Earthquakes, Mental Health, Veterans Health
- Abstract
Objective: The 1994 earthquake that struck Northridge, California, led to the closure of the Veterans Health Administration Medical Center at Sepulveda. This article examines the earthquake's impact on the mental health of an existing cohort of veterans who had previously used the Sepulveda Veterans Health Administration Medical Center., Methods: From 1 to 3 months after the disaster, trained interviewers made repeated attempts to contact participants by telephone to administer a repeated measures follow-up design survey based on a survey that had been done preearthquake. Postearthquake data were obtained on 1144 of 1800 (64%) male veterans for whom there were previous data. We tested a predictive latent variable path model of the relations between sociodemographic characteristics, predisaster physical and emotional health measures, and postdisaster emotional health and perceived earthquake impact., Results: Perceived earthquake impact was predicted by predisaster emotional distress, functional limitations, and number of health conditions. Postdisaster emotional distress was predicted by preexisting emotional distress and earthquake impact. The regression coefficient from earthquake impact to postearthquake emotional distress was larger than that of the stability coefficient from preearthquake emotional distress. Postearthquake emotional distress also was affected indirectly by preearthquake emotional distress, health conditions, younger age, and lower socioeconomic status., Conclusions: The postdisaster emotional health of veterans who experienced greater earthquake impact would have likely benefited from postdisaster intervention, regardless of their predisaster emotional health. Younger veterans and veterans with generally poor physical and emotional health were more vulnerable to greater postearthquake emotional distress. Veterans of lower socioeconomic status were disproportionately likely to experience more effects of the disaster because they had more predisaster emotional distress, more functional limitations, and a greater number of health conditions. Because many veterans use non-Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care providers for at least some of their health needs, future disaster planning for both VA and non-VA providers should incorporate interventions targeted at these groups.
- Published
- 2011
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19. Gender differences in smoking and smoking cessation treatment: an examination of the organizational features related to care.
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Farmer MM, Rose DE, Riopelle D, Lanto AB, and Yano EM
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- Female, Health Care Surveys, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Sex Factors, Smoking epidemiology, United States epidemiology, Healthcare Disparities, Hospitals, Veterans organization & administration, Smoking therapy, Smoking Cessation statistics & numerical data, Veterans
- Abstract
Objectives: Veterans experience a particularly heavy burden with smoking rates higher than the general population, and the smoking prevalence for women Veterans has increased in recent years. We examined differences in smoking prevalence and treatment by gender for Veterans receiving at least some of their care at a VA facility, and examined the degree to which organizational factors may be associated with reductions in gender disparities in smoking cessation treatment., Methods: We merged national organizational-level data focused on primary care (sites = 225) and women's health (sites = 195) with patient-level survey data (n = 15,033 smokers). Organizational measures focused on smoking cessation-specific structure and processes in primary care and women's health. Primary outcomes were patient-reported receipt of smoking cessation treatments-advised to quit, medication recommendation, and other treatment recommendation. We used multi-level, random-intercept logistic regression., Results: In 2007, 29% of women and 23% of men were smokers. Overall, 83% of smokers reported they had been advised to quit, 62% recommended medications, and 60% recommended other treatments. Women were more likely to report being advised to quit (odds ratio, 1.33; 95% confidence interval, 1.07-1.64) but equally likely as men to have medications or other treatment recommended. Organizational factors did not eliminate the gender differences in being advised to quit., Conclusion: Despite having equivalent or higher smoking cessation treatment rates, women Veterans were more likely to smoke than men. With the rapid growth of women entering VA care, the need for effective gender-focused and gender-sensitive smoking cessation care arrangements is critical for the future health of women who have served., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2011
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20. Does screening for pain correspond to high quality care for veterans?
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Zubkoff L, Lorenz KA, Lanto AB, Sherbourne CD, Goebel JR, Glassman PA, Shugarman LR, Meredith LS, and Asch SM
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- Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Health Care Surveys, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Outpatient Clinics, Hospital, Patient Satisfaction, Physician-Patient Relations, Analgesics therapeutic use, Attitude of Health Personnel, Hospitals, Veterans, Pain Measurement, Practice Patterns, Physicians', Quality Indicators, Health Care
- Abstract
Background: Routine numeric screening for pain is widely recommended, but its association with overall quality of pain care is unclear., Objective: To assess adherence to measures of pain management quality and identify associated patient and provider factors., Design: A cross-sectional visit-based study., Participants: One hundred and forty adult VA outpatient primary care clinic patients reporting a numeric rating scale (NRS) of moderate to severe pain (four or more on a zero to ten scale). Seventy-seven providers completed a baseline survey regarding general pain management attitudes and a post-visit survey regarding management of 112 participating patients., Measurement and Main Results: We used chart review to determine adherence to four validated process quality indicators (QIs) including noting pain presence, pain character, and pain control, and intensifying pharmacological intervention. The average NRS was 6.7. Seventy-three percent of charts noted the presence of pain, 13.9% the character, 23.6% the degree of control, and 15.3% increased pain medication prescription. Charts were more likely to include documentation of pain presence if providers agreed that "patients want me to ask about pain" and "pain can have negative consequences on patient's functioning". Charts were more likely to document character of pain if providers agreed that "patients are able to rate their pain". Patients with musculoskeletal pain were less likely to have chart documentation of character of pain., Conclusions: Despite routine pain screening in VA, providers seldom documented elements considered important to evaluation and treatment of pain. Improving pain care may require attention to all aspects of pain management, not just screening.
- Published
- 2010
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21. Heart failure: the hidden problem of pain.
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Goebel JR, Doering LV, Shugarman LR, Asch SM, Sherbourne CD, Lanto AB, Evangelista LS, Nyamathi AM, Maliski SL, and Lorenz KA
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Chronic Disease, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pain psychology, Pain Measurement, Palliative Care, Heart Failure complications, Pain etiology, Pain Management
- Abstract
Although dyspnea and fatigue are hallmark symptoms of heart failure (HF), the burden of pain may be underrecognized. This study assessed pain in HF and identified contributing factors. As part of a multicenter study, 96 veterans with HF (96% male, 67+/-11 years) completed measures of symptoms, pain (Brief Pain Inventory [BPI]), functional status (Functional Morbidity Index), and psychological state (Patient Health Questionnaire-2 and Generalized Anxiety Disorder-2). Single items from the BPI interference and the quality of life-end of life measured social and spiritual well-being. Demographic and clinical variables were obtained by chart audit. Correlation and linear regression models evaluated physical, emotional, social, and spiritual factors associated with pain. Fifty-three (55.2%) HF patients reported pain, with a majority (36 [37.5%]) rating their pain as moderate to severe (pain>or=4/10). The presence of pain was reported more frequently than dyspnea (67 [71.3%] vs. 58 [61.7%]). Age (P=0.02), psychological (depression: P=0.002; anxiety: P=0.001), social (P<0.001), spiritual (P=0.010), and physical (health status: P=0.001; symptom frequency: P=0.000; functional status: P=0.002) well-being were correlated with pain severity. In the resulting model, 38% of the variance in pain severity was explained (P<0.001); interference with relations (P<0.001) and symptom number (P=0.007) contributed to pain severity. The association of physical, psychological, social, and spiritual domains with pain suggests that multidisciplinary interventions are needed to address the complex nature of pain in HF.
- Published
- 2009
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22. Exploring alternative approaches to routine outpatient pain screening.
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Lorenz KA, Krebs EE, Bentley TG, Sherbourne CD, Goebel JR, Zubkoff L, Lanto AB, and Asch SM
- Subjects
- California epidemiology, Female, Humans, Male, Mass Screening statistics & numerical data, Middle Aged, Pain Measurement statistics & numerical data, Prevalence, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Mass Screening methods, Outpatients statistics & numerical data, Pain diagnosis, Pain epidemiology, Pain Measurement methods, Veterans statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate potential alternatives to the numeric rating scale (NRS) for routine pain screening., Design: Cross-sectional., Setting: Nineteen Veterans Affairs outpatient clinics in Southern California at two hospitals and six community sites., Patients: Five hundred twenty-eight veterans from primary care, cardiology, and oncology clinics sampled in proportion to the total number of visits made to each clinic during the previous year., Methods: Veterans were approached following clinic visits to complete researcher-administered surveys about their clinic experience. Using the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) interference scale of > or =5 as a reference standard for important unrelieved pain, we evaluated potential alternative pain screening items and item combinations by analyzing sensitivity and specificity, area under the receiver operating curve (AUC), and likelihood ratios., Results: Of the veterans, 43.6% had unrelieved pain as measured by the reference standard. Approximately half had painful musculoskeletal diagnoses and one-third had comorbid mental health or substance use disorders. The fifth vital sign detected pain less accurately than did an NRS with a 1-week timeframe and an item assessing pain-related bother over the past week. AUCs were 0.79, 0.86, and 0.86, respectively. A sequential approach combining the pain-related bother and NRS with a 1-week timeframe items had good discriminatory ability., Conclusions: Alternative single or combined pain screening strategies assessing pain-related bother may improve routine pain detection.
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- 2009
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23. Early identification of co-occurring pain, depression and anxiety.
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Sherbourne CD, Asch SM, Shugarman LR, Goebel JR, Lanto AB, Rubenstein LV, Wen L, Zubkoff L, and Lorenz KA
- Subjects
- Aged, Anxiety psychology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression psychology, Early Diagnosis, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pain psychology, Stress, Psychological complications, Stress, Psychological diagnosis, Stress, Psychological psychology, Anxiety complications, Anxiety diagnosis, Depression complications, Depression diagnosis, Pain complications, Pain diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Depression and anxiety frequently co-occur with pain and may affect treatment outcomes. Early identification of these co-occurring psychiatric conditions during routine pain screening may be critical for optimal treatment., Objective: To determine aspects of pain related to psychological distress, and, among distressed patients, to determine whether pain factors are related to provider identification of distress., Design: Cross-sectional interview of primary care patients and their providers participating in a Veteran's Administration HELP-Vets study., Subjects: A total of 528 predominately male Veterans, Measurements and Main Results: We measured self-reported pain, including a 0-10 numeric rating scale and interference items from the Brief Pain Inventory. To evaluate distress, brief indicators of depression, anxiety and PTSD were combined. A substantial number of patients had psychological distress (41%), which was even higher (62%) among patients with moderate-severe current pain. Only 29% of those with distress reported talking to their provider about emotional problems during their visit. In multivariate analyses, other pain factors related to distress included interference with enjoyment of life and relationships with others, pain in multiple locations and joint pains. Prior diagnoses of depression and anxiety were also related to current distress. Only prior diagnosis and patient reported headaches and sleep interference because of pain were related to provider identification of distress., Conclusions: VA patients with moderate-severe pain are at high risk for psychological distress, which often goes unrecognized. Providers need to be more vigilant to mental health problems in patients experiencing high pain levels. Targeted screening for co-occurring conditions is warranted.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A comparative study of pain in heart failure and non-heart failure veterans.
- Author
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Goebel JR, Doering LV, Evangelista LS, Nyamathi AM, Maliski SL, Asch SM, Sherbourne CD, Shugarman LR, Lanto AB, Cohen A, and Lorenz KA
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Ambulatory Care statistics & numerical data, Analysis of Variance, California epidemiology, Chronic Disease, Comorbidity, Disease Progression, Female, Heart Failure complications, Heart Failure epidemiology, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Pain diagnosis, Pain Measurement, Palliative Care, Pilot Projects, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Heart Failure physiopathology, Pain etiology, Veterans statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Progress has been made in addressing pain in specific diseases such as cancer, but less attention has focused on understanding pain in nonmalignant states, including heart failure (HF)., Methods and Results: From March 2006 to June 2007, 672 veterans were surveyed and scores for the Brief Pain Inventory, pain distress, clinically significant pain levels (moderate to severe pain), and pain locations were compared using univariate and multivariate models. Fifteen percent of the final sample had HF (95/634). In our study, the HF patients were older (P < .000), reported lower levels of general health (P = .018), had more co-morbidities (P < .000), were more likely to have a history of cancer (P = .035), and suffered more chest pain and fewer headaches (P = .026, P = .03, respectively) than their non-HF cohorts. When controlling for age, co-morbidity and cancer disorders, HF and non-HF patients did not differ in pain severity, interference, distress or locations. Of the patients currently experiencing pain, 67.3% of HF patients and 68.4% of non-HF patients rated their pain as moderate or severe (pain >or=4 on a 0 to 10 scale)., Conclusions: Although HF has not been identified as a painful condition, this study suggests the burden of pain is significant for both HF and non-HF ambulatory care patients.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Targeting primary care referrals to smoking cessation clinics does not improve quit rates: implementing evidence-based interventions into practice.
- Author
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Yano EM, Rubenstein LV, Farmer MM, Chernof BA, Mittman BS, Lanto AB, Simon BF, Lee ML, and Sherman SE
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Evidence-Based Medicine, Female, Health Status, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Socioeconomic Factors, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs organization & administration, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Primary Health Care organization & administration, Quality Improvement organization & administration, Referral and Consultation organization & administration, Smoking Cessation methods
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the impact of a locally adapted evidence-based quality improvement (EBQI) approach to implementation of smoking cessation guidelines into routine practice., Data Sources/study Setting: We used patient questionnaires, practice surveys, and administrative data in Veterans Health Administration (VA) primary care practices across five southwestern states., Study Design: In a group-randomized trial of 18 VA facilities, matched on size and academic affiliation, we evaluated intervention practices' abilities to implement evidence-based smoking cessation care following structured evidence review, local priority setting, quality improvement plan development, practice facilitation, expert feedback, and monitoring. Control practices received mailed guidelines and VA audit-feedback reports as usual care., Data Collection: To represent the population of primary care-based smokers, we randomly sampled and screened 36,445 patients to identify and enroll eligible smokers at baseline (n=1,941) and follow-up at 12 months (n=1,080). We used computer-assisted telephone interviewing to collect smoking behavior, nicotine dependence, readiness to change, health status, and patient sociodemographics. We used practice surveys to measure structure and process changes, and administrative data to assess population utilization patterns., Principal Findings: Intervention practices adopted multifaceted EBQI plans, but had difficulty implementing them, ultimately focusing on smoking cessation clinic referral strategies. While attendance rates increased (p<.0001), we found no intervention effect on smoking cessation., Conclusions: EBQI stimulated practices to increase smoking cessation clinic referrals and try other less evidence-based interventions that did not translate into improved quit rates at a population level., (© Health Research and Educational Trust.)
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Availability of gynecologic services in the department of veterans affairs.
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Seelig MD, Yano EM, Bean-Mayberry B, Lanto AB, and Washington DL
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Genital Diseases, Female therapy, Gynecology statistics & numerical data, Hospitals, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Humans, Middle Aged, Patient Satisfaction statistics & numerical data, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs statistics & numerical data, Genital Diseases, Female epidemiology, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, United States Department of Veterans Affairs organization & administration, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Women's Health, Women's Health Services statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Purpose: The optimum approach to providing the Congressionally mandated gender-specific services for which women veterans are eligible is unknown. We evaluated onsite availability of gynecologic services, clinic type and staffing arrangements, and the impact of having a gynecology clinic (GYN) and/or an obstetrician gynecologist (OBGYN) routinely available., Methods: We analyzed data from the 2001 national VHA Survey of Women Veterans Health Programs and Practices (n = 136 sites; response rate, 83%). We assessed availability of gynecologic services, and evaluated differences in availability by clinic type (designated women's health provider in primary care [PC], separate women's health clinic for primary care [WHC], and/or separate GYN) and staffing arrangements (OBGYN routinely involved versus not)., Main Findings: Out of 133 sites, 77 sites (58%) offered services through a GYN and 56 sites (42%) did not have GYN. Seventy-two (54%) sites had a WHC. More sites with an OBGYN provided endometrial biopsies (91% vs. 20%), IUD insertion (85% vs. 14%), infertility evaluation (56% vs. 23%), infertility treatment (25% vs. none), gynecologic surgery (65 vs. 28%), p < .01. In comparison to sites without WHC, those with WHC were more likely to offer services onsite: endometrial biopsy odds ratio (OR) 6.0 (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.0-18.1); IUD insertion 4.4 (1.6-12.2); infertility evaluation 2.8 (1.2-6.3); and gynecologic surgery 2.3 (1.0-5.4)., Conclusion: As the VA develops strategic plans for accommodating the growing number of women veterans, leaders should consider focusing on establishing WHC for primary care and routine availability of OBGYN or other qualified clinicians, rather than establishing separate GYN.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The evolution of changes in primary care delivery underlying the Veterans Health Administration's quality transformation.
- Author
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Yano EM, Simon BF, Lanto AB, and Rubenstein LV
- Subjects
- Health Care Reform, Health Care Surveys, Humans, Models, Organizational, Organizational Innovation, Personnel Staffing and Scheduling trends, Practice Management, Medical trends, Primary Health Care organization & administration, Program Development, Quality of Health Care organization & administration, United States, Primary Health Care trends, Quality of Health Care trends, United States Department of Veterans Affairs
- Abstract
Objectives: Suffering from waning demand, poor quality, and reform efforts enabling veterans to "vote with their feet" and leave, the Veterans Health Administration (VA) health care system transformed itself through a series of substantive changes. We examined the evolution of primary care changes underlying VA's transformation., Methods: We used 3 national organizational surveys from 1993, 1996, and 1999 that measured primary care organization, staffing, management, and resource sufficiency to evaluate changes in VA primary care delivery., Results: Only rudimentary primary care was in place in 1993. Primary care enrollment grew from 38% in 1993 to 45% in 1996, and to 95% in 1999 as VA adopted team structures and increased the assignment of patients to individual providers. Specialists initially staffed primary care until generalist physicians and nonphysican providers increased. Primary care-based quality improvement and authority expanded, and resource sufficiency (e.g., computers, space) grew. Provider notification of admissions and emergency department, urgent-care visit, and sub-specialty-consult results increased nearly 5 times., Conclusions: Although VA's quality transformation had many underlying causes, investment in primary care development may have served as an essential substrate for many VA quality gains.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Effectiveness of an on-call counselor at increasing smoking treatment.
- Author
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Sherman SE, Estrada M, Lanto AB, Farmer MM, and Aldana I
- Subjects
- Humans, Counseling, Hotlines, Smoking Cessation
- Abstract
Background: Smoking cessation programs are very effective, but little is known about how to get smokers to attend these programs., Objective: To evaluate whether an "on-call" counselor increased smoking cessation program referrals and attendance., Design: We randomly assigned 1 of 2 primary care teams at the Sepulveda VA Ambulatory Care Center to intervention and the other to usual care. The intervention team had access to an on-call counselor who provided counseling and care coordination. Social marketing efforts included educational outreach, provider feedback, and financial incentives., Measurements: Baseline telephone interviews with a sample of 482 smokers were conducted, covering smoking history, health status, and smoking cessation treatments. Follow-up surveys were conducted at mid-intervention (n = 251) and post-intervention (n = 251)., Results: Two hundred ninety-six patients were referred to the on-call counselor, who counseled each patient in person and provided follow-up calls. The counselor referred 45% to the on-site program, and 27% to telephone counseling; of these, half followed through on the referral; 28% declined referral. Patients on the intervention team were more likely to report being counseled about smoking (68% vs 56%; odds ratio [OR] 1.7, CI 1.0-2.9) and referred to a cessation program (38% vs 23%; OR 2.1, CI 1.2-3.6); having attended the program (11% vs 4%; OR 3.6, CI 1.2-10.5); and receiving a prescription for bupropion (17% vs 8%) (OR 2.3, CI 1.1-5.1). The effect was not sustained after the case management period., Conclusions: Having access to an on-call counselor with case management increased rates of smoking cessation counseling, referral, and treatment. The intervention could be reproduced by other health care systems.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Assessing the structure of smoking cessation care in the Veterans Health Administration.
- Author
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Sherman SE, Yano EM, York LS, Lanto AB, Chernof BA, and Mittman BS
- Subjects
- Ambulatory Care Facilities standards, Health Care Surveys, Health Plan Implementation, Hospitals, Veterans standards, Humans, Pilot Projects, Practice Guidelines as Topic, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs standards, Ambulatory Care Facilities organization & administration, Guideline Adherence statistics & numerical data, Hospitals, Veterans organization & administration, Practice Patterns, Physicians' statistics & numerical data, Smoking Cessation statistics & numerical data, United States Department of Veterans Affairs organization & administration
- Abstract
Purpose: National smoking cessation practice guidelines offer recommendations regarding the processes and structure of care. Facilities routinely measure the processes of care but not the structure of care. This pilot study assessed the structure of smoking cessation care at Veterans Health Administration facilities., Methods: Key informants at 18 sites completed a brief checklist survey adapted from national smoking cessation guidelines. Responses were compared with detailed site surveys., Results: Guideline adherence was seen in identifying smokers and treating inpatient smokers. Areas of low adherence include offering incentives and defining staff responsibilities. The checklist survey showed poor correspondence with the detailed survey, with low agreement on systematic screening (kappa = .21) and higher agreement on primary care prescribing authority (kappa = .53)., Discussion: This pilot survey provides a potential rapid method for assessing adherence to systems recommendations from the national smoking cessation guidelines. The relatively low agreement with a more detailed survey suggests that the two surveys may have been measuring different aspects of smoking cessation care.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Gender differences in smoking cessation services received among veterans.
- Author
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Sherman SE, Fu SS, Joseph AM, Lanto AB, and Yano EM
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Chi-Square Distribution, Cohort Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Sex Distribution, Smoking epidemiology, Smoking psychology, Southwestern United States epidemiology, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Women's Health Services organization & administration, Smoking Cessation methods, Smoking Cessation statistics & numerical data, Smoking Prevention, Veterans psychology, Women's Health, Women's Health Services statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Introduction: Smoking is the leading preventable cause of death among women in the United States. It is a particular problem for women using the Veterans Health Administration (VA), where the prevalence of smoking among women is 30%. We compared the baseline characteristics of male and female smokers and then assessed the smoking cessation services they received to determine whether there are important gender differences in care., Methods: As part of a study of implementing national guidelines for smoking cessation taking place at 18/23 VA centers in the southwestern and western United States, we conducted a baseline survey of a random sample of 1,941 smokers in primary care (129 women, 1,812 men) to assess the smoking cessation services received by female and male veterans. Subjects were followed 1 year later (73 women, 1007 men). Results for men and women were compared using chi-square tests and analysis of variance. Logistic regression analyses were conducted to determine factors that were independently associated with receipt of smoking cessation services., Results: Female smokers were younger, more educated, and less likely to be married than male smokers. Women were equally likely to report being advised to quit smoking or referred to a smoking cessation program but were much less likely to report receiving a prescription for nicotine patches (OR .5, 95% CI .3-.9). One year later, female smokers were less likely to have successfully quit smoking., Conclusion: Women were less likely to report receiving nicotine patches for smoking cessation. Future interventions to increase use of smoking cessation medications for female smokers will also hopefully increase their quit rate.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Primary care practice and facility quality orientation: influence on breast and cervical cancer screening rates.
- Author
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Goldzweig CL, Parkerton PH, Washington DL, Lanto AB, and Yano EM
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Guideline Adherence statistics & numerical data, Health Services Research, Humans, Logistic Models, Mammography standards, Mammography statistics & numerical data, Mass Screening methods, Mass Screening standards, Multivariate Analysis, Organizational Culture, Organizational Policy, Physician Incentive Plans organization & administration, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Practice Patterns, Physicians' statistics & numerical data, Predictive Value of Tests, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Vaginal Smears standards, Vaginal Smears statistics & numerical data, Breast Neoplasms diagnosis, Mass Screening statistics & numerical data, Practice Patterns, Physicians' standards, Primary Health Care organization & administration, Quality Assurance, Health Care organization & administration, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Despite the importance of early cancer detection, variation in screening rates among physicians is high. Insights into factors influencing variation can guide efforts to decrease variation and increase screening rates., Objectives: To explore the association of primary care practice features and a facility's quality orientation with breast and cervical cancer screening rates., Study Design: Cross-sectional study of screening rates among 144 Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) medical centers and for a national sample of women., Methods: We linked practice structure and quality improvement characteristics of individual VA medical centers from 2 national surveys (1 to primary care directors and 1 to a stratified random sample of employees) to breast and cervical cancer screening rates determined from a review of random medical records. We conducted bivariate analyses and multivariate logistic regression of primary care practice and facility features on cancer screening rates, above and below the median., Results: While the national screening rates were high for breast (87%) and cervical cancer (90%), higher screening rates were more likely when primary care providers were consistently notified of specialty visits and when staff perceived a greater organizational commitment to quality and anticipated rewards and recognition for better performance., Conclusions: Organization and quality orientation of the primary care practice and its facility can enhance breast and cervical cancer screening rates. Internal recognition of quality performance and an overall commitment to quality improvement may foster improved prevention performance, with impact varying by clinical service.
- Published
- 2004
32. Can a specialty society educate its members to think differently about clinical decisions? Results of a randomized trial.
- Author
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Gifford DR, Mittman BS, Fink A, Lanto AB, Lee ML, and Vickrey BG
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Decision Making, Education, Medical, Education, Medical, Continuing, Neurology education, Societies, Medical, Specialization
- Abstract
Objective: Measure the effect of specialty society-developed continuing medical education (CME) on clinical decision making., Design: Randomized controlled trial., Setting: National sample of neurologists., Participants: Of 492 neurologists randomly selected from an ongoing American Academy of Neurology CME program, 248 were randomized to receive a mailed CME course, and 244 did not receive it., Intervention: A mailed educational course on movement disorders, developed by the specialty society, containing information on diseases and practice recommendations with illustrative case presentations., Measurements and Main Results: We assessed adherence to 16 practice recommendations on disease detection, diagnostic test use, and treatments by mailed survey sent to all subjects 4.5 months after the intervention group received the course (73% response rate). The survey contained detailed clinical scenarios to measure self-reported clinical decision making and short open-ended questions to measure factual knowledge. More intervention participants (up to 2.6 times more) than control subjects reported clinical decision making adherent to 9 of the 16 recommendations (p < .05). For 4 of the other 7 recommendations, adherence exceeded 85% in both groups. Within the intervention group, neurologists who read the educational course were 2 to 6 times more likely to be adherent than neurologists who did not. The intervention group had better factual knowledge than control subjects in six of seven areas (p < .01)., Conclusions: This educational course improved neurologists' reported decision making. Specialty society-developed CME that utilizes a similar format may enhance the effectiveness of mailed CME information to improve physicians' approach to clinical decisions.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
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33. Evaluation of the VA's Pilot Program in Institutional Reorganization toward Primary and Ambulatory Care: Part I, Changes in process and outcomes of care.
- Author
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Rubenstein LV, Yano EM, Fink A, Lanto AB, Simon B, Graham M, and Robbins AS
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, California, Chi-Square Distribution, Continuity of Patient Care, Hospital Restructuring, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Patient Satisfaction, Pilot Projects, Sampling Studies, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Ambulatory Care organization & administration, Hospitals, Veterans organization & administration, Primary Health Care organization & administration
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the impact of the reorganization of an academic Veterans Affairs medical center toward primary and ambulatory care--including the implementation of a medical-center-wide interdisciplinary firm system and ambulatory care training program--on the quality of primary ambulatory care., Method: Randomly selected male veterans visiting the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Sepulveda, California, were surveyed in 1992, early in the implementation of the program, and in 1993, after the program had been fully implemented. Two surveys were used: one before the veterans saw their primary care providers (practice-based survey) and the other immediately after patient visits (visit-based survey). Survey-participant data were then linked to computerized utilization and mortality data. Survey topics were mapped to the medical center's strategic plan and goals for ambulatory care, and focused on patients' reports about the care they had received in terms of continuity, access, preventive care, and other aspects of the biopsychosocial model of care. Administrative computer data were then used to evaluate effects on medical center workload. Statistical analyses included analysis of variance, analysis of covariance, chi-square, and logistic regression., Results: For practice-based comparisons, complete data were available for 1,262 veterans in 1992 and 1,373 in 1993. For visit-based comparisons, complete data were available for 1,407 veterans in 1992 and 643 in 1993. Results included statistically significant improvements in continuity of care and detection of depression as well as increased rates of preventive care counseling (smoking and exercise). The proportion of veterans reporting being seen by physicians increased, as did the proportion of patients seen for check-ups rather than for acute problems. Fewer patients were seen in subspecialty clinics than in general medicine clinics. Patient satisfaction increased, hospitalizations decreased, and death rates decreased. Alcohol counseling and access to care for acute symptoms declined. Workload shifted from subspecialists to generalists and from inpatient care to outpatient care., Conclusion: The institutional reorganization toward primary and ambulatory care succeeded in substantially improving the quality of ambulatory care, reflecting improvements in the system of care and of health care provider training in ambulatory care.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Anatomy of an outpatient visit. An evaluation of clinic efficiency in general and subspecialty clinics.
- Author
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Lanto AB, Yano EM, Fink A, and Rubenstein LV
- Subjects
- Appointments and Schedules, California, Data Collection, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Group Practice organization & administration, Group Practice standards, Hospitals, Teaching organization & administration, Hospitals, Teaching standards, Outpatient Clinics, Hospital standards, Time and Motion Studies, Efficiency, Organizational standards, Hospitals, Veterans organization & administration, Outpatient Clinics, Hospital organization & administration
- Abstract
The time spent in outpatient visits to a Veteran's Administration medical center was measured to determine clinic efficiency. Patient flow through the outpatient department of the medical center was studied to: 1) evaluate how time is spent in VA outpatient settings as compared to non-VA outpatient settings, including waiting time, checking of vital signs, seeing the doctor, etc., 2) develop a baseline to gauge the comparison of the effects of management changes; and 3) develop a mechanism for collecting clinic activity efficiency.
- Published
- 1995
35. Increased false alarms in a subset of persons at-risk for Huntington's disease.
- Author
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Lanto AB, Riege WH, Mazziotta JC, Pahl JJ, and Phelps ME
- Abstract
The accuracy and decision criterion of 51 persons at-risk (AR) for Huntington's disease (HD) along with 36 age-matched, healthy controls were evaluated using a word recognition memory test. Analyses revealed that the AR group was less accurate than the controls at recognizing a previously learned word list. Within the AR group, 13 AR persons were identified who committed significantly more false alarms than the remaining AR and control people. The 13 AR persons also showed evidence of lower cerebral metabolic ratios in frontal, caudate, and insula regions, as evaluated by positron emission tomography using I8F-Fluoro-deoxyglucose, and were considered to be at high risk for HD. One of these 13 AR persons has become symptomatic since testing, confirming the high risk status. These results suggest that certain tests of cognition and decision-making together with measures of regional brain metabolism might show the subtle cognitive changes taking place in potential HD gene carriers years before the clinical symptoms are observed.
- Published
- 1990
36. Reduced cerebral glucose metabolism in asymptomatic subjects at risk for Huntington's disease.
- Author
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Mazziotta JC, Phelps ME, Pahl JJ, Huang SC, Baxter LR, Riege WH, Hoffman JM, Kuhl DE, Lanto AB, and Wapenski JA
- Subjects
- Adult, Deoxyglucose analogs & derivatives, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Humans, Huntington Disease metabolism, Middle Aged, Risk, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Caudate Nucleus metabolism, Glucose metabolism, Huntington Disease genetics
- Abstract
Symptomatic patients with Huntington's disease may have reduced glucose metabolism in the caudate nuclei. We used positron emission tomography and [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose to study cerebral glucose metabolism in 95 subjects: 58 clinically asymptomatic (chorea-free) subjects at risk for Huntington's disease, 10 symptomatic patients with the disease, and 27 controls. All the symptomatic patients had marked reductions in caudate glucose metabolism. Despite a normal structural appearance on computed tomography, caudate glucose metabolism was bilaterally reduced in 31 percent of the subjects at risk (18 of 58). Using each at-risk subject's age and the sex of the affected parent, we averaged individual risk estimates for the development of Huntington's disease for this group and predicted that the probability of having the clinically unexpressed Huntington's disease gene should be 33.9 +/- 6.0 percent for the group. Thus, there was excellent agreement between the predicted percentage of carriers of the Huntington's disease gene (33.9 +/- 6.0 percent) and the percentage with metabolic abnormalities of the caudate nuclei (31 percent). These results indicate that the measurement of glucose metabolism may allow the observation of the pathophysiologic effects of the Huntington's disease gene during the natural development of the disease. It may also provide a direct means to monitor the response to experimental treatments during both the clinically asymptomatic and the symptomatic phases of the disorder.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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