272 results on '"Steers, W. Neil"'
Search Results
2. Investigation of the role of perceived access to primary care in mediating and moderating racial and ethnic disparities in chronic disease control in the veterans health administration
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Shannon, Evan Michael, Steers, W. Neil, and Washington, Donna L.
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Chronic diseases -- Demographic aspects -- Care and treatment ,Primary health care -- Access control ,Business ,Health care industry - Abstract
Objective: To examine the role of patient-perceived access to primary care in mediating and moderating racial and ethnic disparities in hypertension control and diabetes control among Veterans Health Administration (VA) users. Data Source and Study Setting: We performed a secondary analysis of national VA user administrative data for fiscal years 2016-2019. Study Design: Our primary exposure was race or ethnicity and primary outcomes were binary indicators of hypertension control ( Data Collection/Extraction Methods: We included VA users with hypertension and diabetes control data from the External Peer Review Program who had contemporaneously completed the Survey of Healthcare Experience of Patients-Patient-Centered Medical Home. Hypertension (34,233 patients) and diabetes (23,039 patients) samples were analyzed separately. Principal Findings: After adjustment, Black patients had significantly lower rates of hypertension control than White patients (75.5% vs. 78.8%, p < 0.01); both Black (81.8%) and Hispanic (80.4%) patients had significantly lower rates of diabetes control than White patients (85.9%, p < 0.01 for both differences). Perceived access was lower among Black, Multi-Race and Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islanders compared to White patients in both samples. There was no evidence that perceived access mediated or moderated associations between Black race, Hispanic ethnicity, and hypertension or diabetes control. Conclusions: We observed disparities in hypertension and diabetes control among minoritized patients. There was no evidence that patients' perception of access to primary care mediated or moderated these disparities. Reducing racial and ethnic disparities within VA in hypertension and diabetes control may require interventions beyond those focused on improving patient access. KEYWORDS access to primary care; diabetes mellitus; health disparate, minority, and vulnerable populations; hypertension; mediation analysis; veterans health services What is known on this topic * There are documented racial and ethnic disparities in hypertension and diabetes control among minoritized groups, including in the Veterans Health Administration (VA). * Racial and ethnic disparities in primary care access have also been documented, however, the role that perceived access plays in disparities in chronic disease control remains unknown. What this study adds * This study identified persistent disparities in hypertension and diabetes control for Black and both Black and Hispanic (respectively) VA users who sought primary care at VA clinics, compared to non-Hispanic White patients. * There was no evidence that perceived access mediated or moderated racial and ethnic disparities in hypertension and diabetes control., 1 | INTRODUCTION Disparities in chronic disease control between racially and ethnically minoritized (hereafter referred to as 'minoritized') and non-Hispanic White (hereafter 'White') primary care patients in the United States [...]
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- 2024
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3. Measuring Gender Role Conflict, Internalized Stigma, and Racial and Sexual Identity in Behaviorally Bisexual Black Men
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del Pino, Homero E, Steers, W Neil, Lee, Martin, McCuller, Jason, Hays, Ron D, and Harawa, Nina T
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Gender Studies ,Human Society ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Women's Health ,Female ,Gender Identity ,Gender Role ,Homophobia ,Homosexuality ,Male ,Humans ,Male ,Reproducibility of Results ,Sexual Behavior ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Black MSMW ,Race ,Gender role conflict ,Intersectional identity ,Internalized stigma ,Sexual orientation ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Studies in Human Society ,Psychology ,Clinical Psychology ,Gender studies ,Clinical and health psychology ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
Black men who have sex with men and women (BMSMW) experience pressure to fill hypermasculine ideals and may not identify with "gay" cultural norms. Existing measures of gender role expectations and internalized homophobia are not culturally appropriate for BMSMW. Researchers generally measure categorical identification with race, gender, and sexual orientation groups separately, whereas BMSMW may identify with multiple categories. We modified the Gender Role Conflict Scale to create the M-GRCS and the Internalized Homophobia Scale to include biphobia (Internalized Bi/Homophobia Scale, IBHS). To examine identification at the intersection of race, gender, and sexual orientation, we created 11 Integrated Race and Sexuality Scale (IRSS) items. With data from 429 BMSMW, we conducted exploratory factor analysis of the 59 items using categorical principal axis factoring with unweighted least squares extraction and Promax factor rotation. We created simple-summated multi-item scales and evaluated their construct validity. The rotated solution yielded four factors with 47 items and a simple factor structure: M-GRCS defined two factors (α = .93 for restricted emotionality/affection; .87 for success/power/competition); the IBHS (α = .89) and IRSS (α = .74) each defined a single factor. The IRSS factor was positively correlated with the Lukwago Racial Pride Scale, r(417) = .40. The IBHS factor was negatively correlated with the IRSS factor, r(414) = - .22. The two M-GRCS factors suggest that the construct of hypermasculinity impacts BMSMW. The high IBHS reliability indicates that homophobia and biphobia were positively correlated in this sample. These three scales have potential for future studies with BMSMW.
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- 2022
4. COVID-19 Infection and Mortality in State Veterans Homes: A Multilevel Approach
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Frochen, Stephen, Steers, W. Neil, Wyte-Lake, Tamar, Saliba, Debra, and Dobalian, Aram
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- 2024
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5. Unmet Medical Needs Among Adults Who Move due to Unaffordable Housing: California Health Interview Survey, 2011-2017.
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Chen, Katherine L, Wisk, Lauren E, Nuckols, Teryl K, Elmore, Joann G, Steers, W Neil, and Zimmerman, Frederick J
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Humans ,Logistic Models ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Housing ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,Health Services Accessibility ,California ,access to care ,affordable housing ,delayed care ,displacement ,housing cost ,General & Internal Medicine ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundStable, affordable housing is an established determinant of health. As affordable housing shortages across the USA threaten to displace people from their homes, it is important to understand the implications of cost-related residential moves for healthcare access.ObjectiveTo examine the relationship between cost-related moves and unmet medical needs.DesignWe performed a cross-sectional analysis of 7 waves (2011-2017) of the California Health Interview Survey.ParticipantsWe included all respondents ages 18 and older.Main measuresThe primary predictor variable was residential move history in the past 5 years (cost-related move, non-cost-related move, or no move). The primary outcome was unmet medical needs in the past year (necessary medications and/or medical care that were delayed or not received).Key resultsOur sample included 146,417 adults (42-47% response rate), representing a weighted population of 28,518,590. Overall, 20.3% of the sample reported unmet medical needs in the past year, and 4.9% reported a cost-related move in the past 5 years. In multivariable logistic regression models, adjusted risk of unmet medical needs increased for adults with both cost-related moves (aOR 1.38; 95% CI 1.19-1.59) and non-cost-related moves (aOR 1.17; 95% CI 1.09-1.26) compared to those with no moves. Among people who had moved, those with cost-related moves were more likely to report unmet medical needs compared to people with non-cost-related moves (p = 0.03).ConclusionsPeople who have moved due to unaffordable housing represent a population at increased risk for unmet medical needs. Policy makers seeking to improve population health should consider strategies to limit cost-related moves and to mitigate their adverse effects on healthcare access.
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- 2021
6. Measuring Gender Role Conflict, Internalized Stigma, and Racial and Sexual Identity in Behaviorally Bisexual Black Men.
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Del Pino, Homero E, Steers, W Neil, Lee, Martin, McCuller, Jason, Hays, Ron D, and Harawa, Nina T
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Black MSMW ,Gender role conflict ,Internalized stigma ,Intersectional identity ,Race ,Sexual orientation ,Clinical Psychology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Studies in Human Society ,Psychology - Abstract
Black men who have sex with men and women (BMSMW) experience pressure to fill hypermasculine ideals and may not identify with "gay" cultural norms. Existing measures of gender role expectations and internalized homophobia are not culturally appropriate for BMSMW. Researchers generally measure categorical identification with race, gender, and sexual orientation groups separately, whereas BMSMW may identify with multiple categories. We modified the Gender Role Conflict Scale to create the M-GRCS and the Internalized Homophobia Scale to include biphobia (Internalized Bi/Homophobia Scale, IBHS). To examine identification at the intersection of race, gender, and sexual orientation, we created 11 Integrated Race and Sexuality Scale (IRSS) items. With data from 429 BMSMW, we conducted exploratory factor analysis of the 59 items using categorical principal axis factoring with unweighted least squares extraction and Promax factor rotation. We created simple-summated multi-item scales and evaluated their construct validity. The rotated solution yielded four factors with 47 items and a simple factor structure: M-GRCS defined two factors (α = .93 for restricted emotionality/affection; .87 for success/power/competition); the IBHS (α = .89) and IRSS (α = .74) each defined a single factor. The IRSS factor was positively correlated with the Lukwago Racial Pride Scale, r(417) = .40. The IBHS factor was negatively correlated with the IRSS factor, r(414) = - .22. The two M-GRCS factors suggest that the construct of hypermasculinity impacts BMSMW. The high IBHS reliability indicates that homophobia and biphobia were positively correlated in this sample. These three scales have potential for future studies with BMSMW.
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- 2021
7. Race Differences in Patient Experience by Hispanic Ethnicity Among Veteran Health Administration Users
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Wong, Michelle S, Steers, W Neil, Hoggatt, Katherine J, Ziaeian, Boback, and Washington, Donna L
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Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Good Health and Well Being ,Ethnicity ,Hispanic or Latino ,Humans ,Patient Outcome Assessment ,Race Factors ,Veterans ,Clinical Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine ,Clinical sciences ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Published
- 2021
8. Correction to “Relationship of neighborhood social determinants of health on racial/ethnic mortality disparities in US veterans—Mediation and moderating effects”
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Wong, Michelle S, Steers, W Neil, Hoggatt, Katherine J, Ziaeian, Boback, and Washington, Donna L
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Epidemiology ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Human Society ,Human Geography ,Good Health and Well Being ,Public Health and Health Services ,Policy and Administration ,Health Policy & Services ,Health services and systems ,Policy and administration - Published
- 2020
9. Relationship of neighborhood social determinants of health on racial/ethnic mortality disparities in US veterans-Mediation and moderating effects.
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Wong, Michelle S, Steers, W Neil, Hoggatt, Katherine J, Ziaeian, Boback, and Washington, Donna L
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Racial/ethnic disparities ,Veterans ,neighborhood deprivation ,residential segregation ,social determinants of health ,Racial ,ethnic disparities ,Health Policy & Services ,Public Health and Health Services ,Policy and Administration - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine mediation and moderation of racial/ethnic all-cause mortality disparities among Veteran Health Administration (VHA)-users by neighborhood deprivation and residential segregation.Data sourcesElectronic medical records for 10/2008-9/2009 VHA-users linked to National Death Index, 2000 Area Deprivation Index, and 2006-2009 US Census.Study designRacial/ethnic groups included American Indian/Alaskan Native (AI/AN), Asian, non-Hispanic black, Hispanic, Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander, and non-Hispanic white (reference). We measured neighborhood deprivation by Area Deprivation Index, calculated segregation for non-Hispanic black, Hispanic, and AI/AN using the Isolation Index, evaluated mediation using inverse odds-weighted Cox regression models and moderation using Cox regression models testing for neighborhood*race/ethnicity interactions.Principal findingsMortality disparities existed for AI/ANs (HR = 1.07, 95%CI:1.01-1.10) but no other groups after covariate adjustment. Neighborhood deprivation and Hispanic segregation neither mediated nor moderated AI/AN disparities. Non-Hispanic black segregation both mediated and moderated AI/AN disparities. The AI/AN vs. non-Hispanic white disparity was attenuated for AI/ANs living in neighborhoods with greater non-Hispanic black segregation (P = .047). Black segregation's mediating effect was limited to VHA-users living in counties with low black segregation. AI/AN segregation also mediated AI/AN mortality disparities in counties that included or were near AI/AN reservations.ConclusionsNeighborhood characteristics, particularly black and AI/AN residential segregation, may contribute to AI/AN mortality disparities among VHA-users, particularly in communities that were rural, had greater black segregation, or were located on or near AI/AN reservations. This suggests the importance of neighborhood social determinants of health on racial/ethnic mortality disparities. Living near reservations may allow AI/AN VHA-users to maintain cultural and tribal ties, while also providing them with access to economic and other resources. Future research should explore the experiences of AI/ANs living in black communities and underlying mechanisms to identify targets for intervention.
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- 2020
10. Explaining racial-ethnic differences in hypertension and diabetes control among veterans before and after patient-centered medical home implementation
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Leung, Lucinda B, Steers, W Neil, Hoggatt, Katherine J, and Washington, Donna L
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Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Cardiovascular ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Hypertension ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Generic health relevance ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Black or African American ,Aged ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Female ,Healthcare Disparities ,Hispanic or Latino ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Veterans ,White People ,Young Adult ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Patient-centered medical homes (PCMH) are primary care delivery models that improve care access and population-level health outcomes, yet they have not been observed to narrow racial-ethnic disparities in the Veteran Health Administration (VHA) or other health systems. We aimed to identify and compare underlying drivers of persistent hypertension and diabetes control differences between non-Hispanic Black (Black) and Hispanic versus non-Hispanic White (White) patients before and after PCMH implementation in the VHA. Among Black and Hispanic versus White VHA primary care patients in 2009 (nhypertension = 26,906; ndiabetes = 21,141) and 2014 (nhypertension = 83,809; ndiabetes = 38,887), we retrospectively examined hypertension control (blood pressure
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- 2020
11. The Role of Community-Level Factors on Disparities in COVID-19 Infection Among American Indian/Alaska Native Veterans
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Wong, Michelle S., Upchurch, Dawn M., Steers, W. Neil, Haderlein, Taona P., Yuan, Anita T., and Washington, Donna L.
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- 2022
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12. Provider discussion of health goals and psychosocial needs: Comparing older to younger veteran experience
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Cogan, Alison M., Saliba, Debra, Steers, W. Neil, Frochen, Stephen, Lynch, Kimberly A., Ganz, David A., and Washington, Donna L.
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Medical research ,Medicine, Experimental ,Depression, Mental -- Research ,Health care industry -- Research -- Psychological aspects -- Social aspects ,Veterans -- Research -- Psychological aspects -- Social aspects ,Health care industry ,Business - Abstract
Objective: To examine by age, the veterans' report on whether components of age-friendly health systems were discussed during primary care visits. Data Sources and Study Setting: Veterans Affairs (VA) Survey of Healthcare Experience of Patients from October 2015 to September 2019. Study Design: Cross-sectional survey of VA users by age group (18-44 years, 45-64 years, 65+ years; N = 1,042,318). We used weighted logistic regression models to evaluate disparities in whether veterans discussed with anyone in their provider's office: health goals, depression symptoms, stress, personal problems, and medications. Models were adjusted for socio-demographic characteristics (sex, socioeconomic status, education, rurality) and comorbidity. Data Collection/Extraction Method: Surveys were administered by mail and online. Additional veteran characteristics were extracted from VA administrative data. Principal Findings: In unadjusted analyses, VA users age 18-44 had a higher (-8.2%; CI: -9.0, -7.3) and users aged 45 to 64 had lower (4.0%; CI: 3.7, 4.3) predicted, probably discussing health goals compared to age 65+. Fewer VA users age 65+ reported discussing depression symptoms, personal problems, and stress than other age groups, whereas more VA users age 65+ discussed medications. Results were unchanged after adjusting for socio-demographics and comorbidity. Conclusions: Delivery of goal-concordant care relies on understanding the needs of individual patients. Lower rates of discussing what matters and mood represent potential missed opportunities to deliver age-friendly care for older veterans. KEYWORDS geriatrics, goal concordance, health services for older adults, health care, patient experience, psychosocial functioning, veterans What is known about this topic * Prior research has shown that patient-reported experiences are less favorable for individuals of younger age, female sex, lower education, lower socioeconomic status, and poorer selfrated health. * There is no consensus in the literature about why patient experiences differ by age. * Limited information exists regarding patient experiences of being asked about health goals, psychosocial concerns, and medications, and how these responses differ by age. What this study adds * Veterans ages 45-64 had a predicted probability of 71% for being asked about health goals, compared to 67% for Veterans age 65-r and 59% for age 18-44. * Veterans ages 65+ had a predicted probability of 45% for being asked about personal problems, compared to 57% of Veterans ages 45-64 and 59% 18-44. * Age disparities in discussing health goals and psychosocial needs during medical visits persisted after adjusting models for other characteristics known to be associated with disparities in patient experience, including sex, education, socioeconomic status, and health status., 1 | INTRODUCTION The U.S. veteran population is aging and will increasingly require ageappropriate care planning and delivery. Approximately 50% of veterans nationally and 47.1% of Veterans Health Administration (VA) [...]
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- 2023
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13. Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Mortality Across the Veterans Health Administration
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Wong, Michelle S, Hoggatt, Katherine J, Steers, W Neil, Frayne, Susan M, Huynh, Alexis K, Yano, Elizabeth M, Saechao, Fay S, Ziaeian, Boback, and Washington, Donna L
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Epidemiology ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,American Indian or Alaska Native ,Good Health and Well Being ,health disparities ,mortality ,racial ,ethnic disparities ,Veterans ,racial/ethnic disparities ,Public health - Abstract
Purpose: Equal-access health care systems such as the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) reduce financial and nonfinancial barriers to care. It is unknown if such systems mitigate racial/ethnic mortality disparities, such as those well documented in the broader U.S. population. We examined racial/ethnic mortality disparities among VHA health care users, and compared racial/ethnic disparities in VHA and U.S. general populations. Methods: Linking VHA records for an October 2008 to September 2009 national VHA user cohort, and National Death Index records, we assessed all-cause, cancer, and cardiovascular-related mortality through December 2011. We calculated age-, sex-, and comorbidity-adjusted mortality hazard ratios. We computed sex-stratified, age-standardized mortality risk ratios for VHA and U.S. populations, then compared racial/ethnic disparities between the populations. Results: Among VHA users, American Indian/Alaskan Natives (AI/ANs) had higher adjusted all-cause mortality, whereas non-Hispanic Blacks had higher cause-specific mortality versus non-Hispanic Whites. Asians, Hispanics, and Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islanders had similar, or lower all-cause and cause-specific mortality versus non-Hispanic Whites. Mortality disparities were evident in non-Hispanic-Black men compared with non-Hispanic White men in both VHA and U.S. populations for all-cause, cardiovascular, and cancer (cause-specific) mortality, but disparities were smaller in VHA. VHA non-Hispanic Black women did not experience the all-cause and cause-specific mortality disparity present for U.S. non-Hispanic Black women. Disparities in all-cause and cancer mortality existed in VHA but not in U.S. population AI/AN men. Conclusion: Patterns in racial/ethnic disparities differed between VHA and U.S. populations, with fewer disparities within VHAs equal-access system. Equal-access health care may partially address racial/ethnic mortality disparities, but other nonhealth care factors should also be explored.
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- 2019
14. Evaluation of regional variation in racial and ethnic differences in patient experience among Veterans Health Administration primary care users.
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Shannon, Evan Michael, Jones, Kenneth T., Moy, Ernest, Steers, W. Neil, Toyama, Joy, and Washington, Donna L.
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ACCESS to primary care ,HEALTH equity ,REGIONAL medical programs ,PATIENT experience ,VETERANS' health - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate racial and ethnic differences in patient experience among VA primary care users at the Veterans Integrated Service Network (VISN) level. Data Source and Study Setting: We performed a secondary analysis of the VA Survey of Healthcare Experiences of Patients‐Patient Centered Medical Home for fiscal years 2016–2019. Study Design: We compared 28 patient experience measures (six each in the domains of access and care coordination, 16 in the domain of person‐centered care) between minoritized racial and ethnic groups (American Indian or Alaska Native [AIAN], Asian, Black, Hispanic, Multi‐Race, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander [NHOPI]) and White Veterans. We used weighted logistic regression to test differences between minoritized and White Veterans, controlling for age and gender. Data Collection/Extraction Methods: We defined meaningful difference as both statistically significant at two‐tailed p < 0.05 with a relative difference ≥10% or ≤−10%. Within VISNs, we included tests of group differences with adequate power to detect meaningful relative differences from a minimum of five comparisons (domain agnostic) per VISN, and separately for a minimum of two for access and care coordination and four for person‐centered care domains. We report differences as disparities/large disparities (relative difference ≥10%/≥ 25%), advantages (experience worse or better, respectively, than White patients), or equivalence. Principal Findings: Our analytic sample included 1,038,212 Veterans (0.6% AIAN, 1.4% Asian, 16.9% Black, 7.4% Hispanic, 0.8% Multi‐Race, 0.8% NHOPI, 67.7% White). Across VISNs, the greatest proportion of comparisons indicated disparities for three of seven eligible VISNs for AIAN, 6/10 for Asian, 3/4 for Multi‐Race, and 2/6 for NHOPI Veterans. The plurality of comparisons indicated advantages or equivalence for 17/18 eligible VISNs for Black and 12/14 for Hispanic Veterans. AIAN, Asian, Multi‐Race, and NHOPI groups had more comparisons indicating disparities by VISN in the access domain than person‐centered care and care coordination. Conclusions: We found meaningful differences in patient experience measures across VISNs for minoritized compared to White groups, especially for groups with lower population representation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Correction to: Unmet Medical Needs Among Adults Who Move due to Unaffordable Housing: California Health Interview Survey, 2011–2017
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Chen, Katherine L., Wisk, Lauren E., Nuckols, Teryl K., Elmore, Joann G., Steers, W. Neil, and Zimmerman, Frederick J.
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- 2022
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16. A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial of the MyFamilyPlan Online Preconception Health Education Tool
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Batra, Priya, Mangione, Carol M, Cheng, Eric, Steers, W Neil, Nguyen, Tina A, Bell, Douglas, Kuo, Alice A, and Gregory, Kimberly D
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Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Prevention ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Contraception ,Female ,Folic Acid ,Health Promotion ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Preconception Care ,Reproductive Health ,Self Efficacy ,Young Adult ,preconception health ,health education ,reproductive health ,pregnancy ,internet ,randomized controlled trial ,Human Movement and Sports Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Curriculum and Pedagogy ,Public health - Abstract
PurposeTo evaluate whether exposure to MyFamilyPlan-a web-based preconception health education module-changes the proportion of women discussing reproductive health with providers at well-woman visits.DesignCluster randomized controlled trial. One hundred thirty participants per arm distributed among 34 clusters (physicians) required to detect a 20% change in the primary outcome.SettingUrban academic medical center (California).ParticipantsEligible women were 18 to 45 years old, were English speaking, were nonpregnant, were able to access the Internet, and had an upcoming well-woman visit. E-mail and phone recruitment between September 2015 and May 2016; 292 enrollees randomized.InterventionIntervention participants completed the MyFamilyPlan module online 7 to 10 days before a scheduled well-woman visit; control participants reviewed standard online preconception health education materials.MeasuresThe primary outcome was self-reported discussion of reproductive health with the physician at the well-woman visit. Self-reported secondary outcomes were folic acid use, contraceptive method initiation/change, and self-efficacy score.AnalysisMultilevel multivariate logistic regression.ResultsAfter adjusting for covariates and cluster, exposure to MyFamilyPlan was the only variable significantly associated with an increase in the proportion of women discussing reproductive health with providers (odds ratio: 1.97, 95% confidence interval: 1.22-3.19). Prespecified secondary outcomes were unaffected.ConclusionMyFamilyPlan exposure was associated with a significant increase in the proportion of women who reported discussing reproductive health with providers and may promote preconception health awareness; more work is needed to affect associated behaviors.
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- 2018
17. Examining telehealth use among primary care patients, providers, and clinics during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Der-Martirosian, Claudia, Chu, Karen, Steers, W. Neil, Wyte-Lake, Tamar, Balut, Michelle D., Dobalian, Aram, Heyworth, Leonie, Paige, Neil M., and Leung, Lucinda
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- 2022
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18. Orientation to the Caregiver Role Among Latinas of Mexican Origin
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Mendez-Luck, Carolyn A, Geldhof, G John, Anthony, Katherine P, Steers, W Neil, Mangione, Carol M, and Hays, Ron D
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Caregivers ,Factor Analysis ,Statistical ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Mexican Americans ,Middle Aged ,Motivation ,Psychometrics ,Reproducibility of Results ,Role ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Women ,Young Adult ,Culture ,Factor analysis ,Informal caregiving ,Latino/a ,Clinical Sciences ,Gerontology - Abstract
Purpose of the studyTo develop the Caregiver Orientation Scale for Mexican-Origin Women and evaluate its psychometric properties.Design and methodsWe developed a questionnaire to measure domains of cultural orientation to the caregiver role based on formative research and on the Cultural Justifications for Caregiving Scale. We conducted a series of exploratory factor analyses (EFAs) on data collected from 163 caregivers. We estimated internal consistency reliability (Cronbach's coefficient alpha) and assessed construct validity by estimating correlations between all latent factors and self-rated health, interview language, and weekly hours of care.ResultsEFAs suggested four factors representing familism, obligation, burden, and caregiving intensity that displayed good fit (χ2 (df = 63) = 70.52, p = .24; RMSEA = .03 [90% CI: 0.00, 0.06]; comparative fit index = .99). Multi-item scales representing the four domains had coefficient alphas ranging from .68 to .86. Obligation was positively associated with burden (.46, p < .001) and intensity (.34, p < .01), which were themselves positively correlated (.63, p < .001). Familism was positively associated with obligation (.25, p < .05) yet negatively associated with burden (-.35, p < .01) and intensity (-.22, p < .05). Weekly hours of care were positively associated with burden (.26, p < .01) and intensity (.18, p < .05), whereas self-rated health and burden (-.21, p < .05) and Spanish language and intensity (-.31, p < .001) were negatively correlated.ImplicationsThe study shows that Mexican-origin caregiver orientation is multidimensional and that caregivers may have conflicting motivations for caregiving.
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- 2016
19. Results from the Natural Experiments for Translation in Diabetes Study: Comparing Medical and Prescription Costs in Disease-specific and Standard Benefit Plans Over Time
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Moin, Tannaz, Steers, W Neil, Duru, Kenrick, Turk, Norman, Keckhafer, Abigail M, Luchs, Robert, Ho, Sam, Mangione, Carol M, and Ettner, Susan L
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Endocrinology & Metabolism ,Medical and Health Sciences - Published
- 2016
20. The association of a diabetes-specific health plan with ER and inpatient hospital utilization: a natural experiment for translation in diabetes (NEXT-D)
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Moin, Tannaz, Steers, W Neil, Ettner, Susan L, Duru, O Kenrik, Turk, Norman, Neugebauer, Romain, Chan, Charles, Luchs, Robert H, Ho, Sam, and Mangione, Carol M
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Good Health and Well Being ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Health Policy & Services - Published
- 2015
21. Obesity and Health Care Experiences among Women and Men Veterans
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Breland, Jessica Y., Wong, Michelle S., Frayne, Susan M., Hoggatt, Katherine J., Steers, W. Neil, Saechao, Fay, and Washington, Donna L.
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- 2019
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22. Depression and All‐Cause Mortality in Persons with Diabetes Mellitus: Are Older Adults at Higher Risk? Results from the Translating Research Into Action for Diabetes Study
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Kimbro, Lindsay B, Mangione, Carol M, Steers, W Neil, Duru, O Kenrik, McEwen, Laura, Karter, Andrew, and Ettner, Susan L
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Epidemiology ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Diabetes ,Prevention ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Depression ,Health Services ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Cause of Death ,Cohort Studies ,Diabetes Complications ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Risk Assessment ,Young Adult ,depression ,diabetes mellitus ,mortality ,elderly ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Geriatrics ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
ObjectivesTo compare the strength of the association between depression and mortality between elderly and younger individuals with diabetes mellitus.DesignA survival analysis conducted in a longitudinal cohort study of persons with diabetes mellitus to test the association between depression and mortality in older (≥ 65) and younger (18-65) adults.SettingManaged care.ParticipantsPersons aged 18 and older with diabetes mellitus who participated in the Wave 2 survey of the Translating Research Into Action for Diabetes (TRIAD) Study (N = 3,341).MeasurementsThe primary outcome was mortality risk, which was measured as days until death using linked data from the National Death Index. Depression was measured using the Patient Health Questionnaire.ResultsAfter controlling for age, sex, race and ethnicity, income, and other comorbidities, mortality risk in persons with diabetes mellitus was 49% higher in those with depression than in those without, although results varied according to age. After controlling for the same variables, mortality risk in persons aged 65 and older with depression was 78% greater than in those without. For those younger than 65, the effect of depression on mortality was smaller and not statistically significant.ConclusionThis analysis suggests that the effect of depression on mortality in persons with diabetes mellitus is most significant for older adults. Because there is evidence in the literature that treatment of depression in elderly adults can lead to lower mortality, these results may suggest that older adults with diabetes mellitus should be considered a high-priority population for depression screening and treatment.
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- 2014
23. Impact of a Diabetes-specific Health Plan on ED and Inpatient Hospital Use
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Moin, Tannaz, Steers, W Neil, Ettner, Susan L, Duru, O Kenrik, Turk, Norman, Chan, Charles, Luchs, Robert H, Kirvan, Anya, Ho, Sam, and Mangione, Carol M
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Endocrinology & Metabolism ,Medical and Health Sciences - Published
- 2014
24. COVID-19 Infection and Mortality in State Veterans Homes: A Multilevel Approach
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Frochen, Stephen, primary, Steers, W. Neil, additional, Wyte-Lake, Tamar, additional, Saliba, Debra, additional, and Dobalian, Aram, additional
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- 2023
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25. Relationship of neighborhood social determinants of health on racial/ethnic mortality disparities in US veterans--Mediation and moderating effects
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Wong, Michelle S., Steers, W. Neil, Hoggatt, Katherine J., Ziaeian, Boback, and Washington, Donna L.
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Medical care discrimination -- Forecasts and trends ,Veterans -- Social aspects -- Health aspects ,Neighborhoods -- Influence -- Health aspects ,Health care disparities -- Demographic aspects ,Market trend/market analysis ,Business ,Health care industry - Abstract
Objective: To examine mediation and moderation of racial/ethnic all-cause mortality disparities among Veteran Health Administration (VHA)-users by neighborhood deprivation and residential segregation. Data sources: Electronic medical records for 10/2008-9/2009 VHA-users linked to National Death Index, 2000 Area Deprivation Index, and 2006-2009 US Census. Study design: Racial/ethnic groups included American Indian/Alaskan Native (AI/AN), Asian, non-Hispanic black, Hispanic, Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander, and non-Hispanic white (reference). We measured neighborhood deprivation by Area Deprivation Index, calculated segregation for non-Hispanic black, Hispanic, and AI/AN using the Isolation Index, evaluated mediation using inverse odds-weighted Cox regression models and moderation using Cox regression models testing for neighborhood*race/ethnicity interactions. Principal findings: Mortality disparities existed for AI/ANs (HR = 1.07, 95%CI:1.01-1.10) but no other groups after covariate adjustment. Neighborhood deprivation and Hispanic segregation neither mediated nor moderated AI/AN disparities. NonHispanic black segregation both mediated and moderated AI/AN disparities. The Al/AN vs. non-Hispanic white disparity was attenuated for AI/ANs living in neighborhoods with greater non-Hispanic black segregation (P = .047). Black segregation's mediating effect was limited to VHA-users living in counties with low black segregation. AI/AN segregation also mediated AI/AN mortality disparities in counties that included or were near AI/AN reservations. Conclusions: Neighborhood characteristics, particularly black and AI/AN residential segregation, may contribute to AI/AN mortality disparities among VHA-users, particularly in communities that were rural, had greater black segregation, or were located on or near AI/AN reservations. This suggests the importance of neighborhood social determinants of health on racial/ethnic mortality disparities. Living near reservations may allow AI/AN VHA-users to maintain cultural and tribal ties, while also providing them with access to economic and other resources. Future research should explore the experiences of AI/ANs living in black communities and underlying mechanisms to identify targets for intervention. KEYWORDS neighborhood deprivation, Racial/ethnic disparities, residential segregation, social determinants of health, Veterans, 1 | INTRODUCTION Health care is an important--but not sole--determinant of health outcomes. (1) Even within health care systems that strive to provide equal access to all patients, racial/ethnic disparities [...]
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The Association of Depression and the Cardiovascular Risk Factors of Blood Pressure, HbA1c, and Body Mass Index among Patients with Diabetes: Results from the Translating Research into Action for Diabetes Study.
- Author
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Kimbro, Lindsay B, Steers, W Neil, Mangione, Carol M, Duru, O Kenrik, and Ettner, Susan L
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Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
Diabetic patients are nearly three times as likely to have depression as their nondiabetic counterparts. Patients with diabetes are already at risk for poor cardiovascular health. Using cross-sectional data from the translating research into action for diabetes (TRIAD) study, the authors tested the association of depression with cardiovascular risk factors in diabetic patients. Depression was measured using the patient health questionnaire (PHQ8). Patients who scored greater than 9 on the PHQ8 were classified as depressed and were compared with those who were not depressed (n = 2,341). Depressed patients did not have significantly different blood pressure levels than those who were not depressed. However, those who were depressed had higher HbA1c levels than those who were not depressed (P < 0.01) and higher BMIs than those who were not depressed (P < 0.01). These results indicate that depressed diabetic patients are at greater risk of having poor control of cardiovascular risk factors and suggest that depression screening should be a standard practice among this patient group.
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- 2012
27. Drug Benefit Changes Under Medicare Advantage Part D: Heterogeneous Effects on Pharmaceutical Use and Expenditures
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Ettner, Susan L, Steers, W Neil, Turk, Norman, Quiter, Elaine S, and Mangione, Carol M
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Aging ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Cohort Studies ,Drug Prescriptions ,Drug Utilization ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Medicare Part D ,Prescription Drugs ,United States ,medicare part D ,benefit design ,drug and medical expenditures ,General & Internal Medicine ,Clinical sciences ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundAlthough Medicare Part D improved drug benefits for many beneficiaries, its impact on the coverage of Medicare Advantage Part D (MAPD) enrollees depended on their pre-existing benefits and whether they had gap coverage under Part D.ObjectiveTo examine changes in prescription drug utilization and expenditures associated with drug benefit changes resulting from the implementation of Part D.PatientsWe studied 248,773 continuously enrolled MAPD patients in eight states. Patients whose insurance product or Census block could not be identified or who had atypical benefits, low-income subsidies or Medicaid coverage were excluded.Main measuresThe main outcomes were changes in prescription drug days supply and expenditures from 2005 to 2006 and 2005 to 2007.DesignWe linked Census data with 2005-7 MAPD claims, encounter, enrollment, and benefits data and estimated associations of the outcomes with changes in drug benefits, controlling for 2005 comorbidities, demographics, and Census population characteristics.Key resultsMAPD enrollees whose drug benefits became potentially less generous after Part D had the smallest increases in drug utilization and expenditures (e.g., drug expenditures increased by $130 between 2005 and 2006), while those who potentially gained the most from Part D experienced the largest increases ($302). The differences in benefit design changes had a stronger association with drug utilization and outcomes among patients at high risk of gap entry than among the entire sample.ConclusionsAlthough Medicare Part D unambiguously improved drug coverage for many elderly, it led to heterogeneous changes in drug benefits among MAPD enrollees, who already had generic and sometimes branded drug benefits. After 2006, benefits were worse for individuals who had branded drug coverage in 2005 but now had a coverage gap, but benefits may have improved for individuals who acquired branded drug coverage. Commensurate with these differential changes in benefits following Part D, changes in drug utilization and expenditures varied substantially as well.
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- 2011
28. Generic‐Only Drug Coverage in the Medicare Part D Gap and Effect on Medication Cost‐Cutting Behaviors for Patients with Diabetes Mellitus: The Translating Research into Action for Diabetes Study
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Duru, O Kenrik, Mangione, Carol M, Hsu, John, Steers, W Neil, Quiter, Elaine, Turk, Norman, Ettner, Susan L, Schmittdiel, Julie A, and Tseng, Chien‐Wen
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Diabetes ,Aging ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Aged ,Cost Control ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Drugs ,Generic ,Humans ,Insulin ,Insurance Coverage ,Medicare Part D ,Patient Compliance ,United States ,pharmaceutical use ,diabetes ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Geriatrics ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
ObjectivesTo examine the association between drug coverage during the Medicare Part D coverage gap and medication cost-cutting behaviors of beneficiaries with diabetes mellitus who use and do not use insulin.DesignThe study was cross-sectional.SettingA network-model health system.Participants2007 survey of Medicare Advantage Part D (MAPD) and Prescription Drug Plan (PDP) beneficiaries who entered the gap by October 2006 (N=1,468, 57% response rate).MeasurementsThe primary predictor variable was no gap coverage versus generic-only gap coverage. Seven cost-cutting behaviors were examined as dependent variables, including cost-related nonadherence (CRN) to any medication. Covariates included race or ethnicity, education, health status, income, and comorbidities, as well as generic medication use in the first quarter. Logistic regression models were constructed using nonresponse weights to generate predicted percentages.ResultsIn multivariate analyses, beneficiaries taking insulin were less likely to report CRN if they had generic-only gap coverage than if they had no gap coverage (16% vs 29%, P=.03). No differences in CRN according to type of gap coverage were seen between beneficiaries not taking insulin.ConclusionMedicare beneficiaries using insulin are at high risk of CRN. Generic-only coverage during the gap is associated with an attenuated risk of CRN in insulin users, possibly because of savings on other, generic medications. Future research should evaluate CRN within alternative benefit designs covering selected brand name medications, such as insulin, during the gap.
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- 2010
29. Identifying Risk Factors for Racial Disparities in Diabetes Outcomes
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Duru, O Kenrik, Gerzoff, Robert B, Selby, Joseph V, Brown, Arleen F, Ackermann, Ronald T, Karter, Andrew J, Ross, Sonja, Steers, W Neil, Herman, William H, Waitzfelder, Beth, and Mangione, Carol M
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Prevention ,Mental Health ,Cardiovascular ,Diabetes ,Patient Safety ,Clinical Research ,Depression ,Good Health and Well Being ,African Americans ,Blood Pressure ,Case-Control Studies ,Cholesterol ,LDL ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Female ,Glycated Hemoglobin A ,Healthcare Disparities ,Humans ,Male ,Medication Adherence ,Middle Aged ,Multivariate Analysis ,Professional-Patient Relations ,Risk Factors ,Self Efficacy ,Black or African American ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Public Health and Health Services ,Applied Economics ,Health Policy & Services - Abstract
BackgroundVersus whites, blacks with diabetes have poorer control of hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), higher systolic blood pressure (SBP), and higher low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol as well as higher rates of morbidity and microvascular complications.ObjectiveTo examine whether several mutable risk factors were more strongly associated with poor control of multiple intermediate outcomes among blacks with diabetes than among similar whites.DesignCase-control study.SubjectsA total of 764 blacks and whites with diabetes receiving care within 8 managed care health plans.MeasuresCases were patients with poor control of at least 2 of 3 intermediate outcomes (HbA1c > or =8.0%, SBP > or =140 mmHg, LDL cholesterol > or =130 mg/dL) and controls were patients with good control of all 3 (HbA1c
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- 2009
30. Elderly Patients' Preferences and Experiences with Providers in Managing Their Drug Costs
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Tseng, Chien‐Wen, Dudley, R Adams, Brook, Robert H, Keeler, Emmett, Steers, W Neil, Alexander, G Caleb, Waitzfelder, Beth E, and Mangione, Carol M
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Aged ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Logistic Models ,Male ,Medicare ,Patient Satisfaction ,Physician-Patient Relations ,Prescription Fees ,United States ,prescription drug costs ,Medicare drug benefit ,patient-provider communication ,decision making ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Geriatrics ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
ObjectivesTo determine whether elderly patients with high drug expenditures want and receive providers' help in managing drug costs.DesignCross-sectional survey.SettingA Medicare managed care plan (>400,000 members) in one state in 2002.ParticipantsOne thousand one hundred six seniors (62% response rate) sampled so that half exceeded caps on their drug benefits the previous year, and all had total drug expenditures in the top quartile of members in their cap level.MeasurementsParticipants' preferences and experiences with providers discussing costs and participation in choosing medications.ResultsTwo-thirds reported difficulty paying for medications, and one-fourth decreased medication use because of cost. Most wanted providers to ask about medication affordability (81%), consider cost (86%), offer choices (70%), and to persuade them or decide for them which medication to use (88%), but few said providers asked about affordability (17%), usually or always discussed prices (19%), or offered choices (45%), although nearly all said providers chose their medications (93%). Sixty-two percent had asked providers for help with drug costs, although 34% who used less medication because of cost or had difficulty paying for medications had not asked for help.ConclusionProviders should be aware that elderly patients want their help in managing drug costs but do not always receive it or ask for help when they need it. Providers could improve communication by initiating conversations about cost and by asking patients about preferences when prescribing.
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- 2007
31. Physician Compensation from Salary and Quality of Diabetes Care
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Kim, Catherine, Steers, W Neil, Herman, William H, Mangione, Carol M, Narayan, KM Venkat, and Ettner, Susan L
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Diabetes ,Clinical Research ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adult ,Aged ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 2 ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Physicians ,Quality of Health Care ,Salaries and Fringe Benefits ,compensation ,diabetes ,quality ,managed care ,Clinical Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine ,Clinical sciences ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine the association between physician-reported percent of total compensation from salary and quality of diabetes care.DesignCross-sectional analysis.ParticipantsPhysicians (n = 1248) and their patients with diabetes mellitus (n = 4200) enrolled in 10 managed care plans.MeasurementsWe examined the associations between physician-reported percent compensation from salary and processes of care including receipt of dilated eye exams and foot exams, advice to take aspirin, influenza immunizations, and assessments of glycemic control, proteinuria, and lipid profile, intermediate outcomes such as adequate control of hemoglobin A1c, lipid levels, and systolic blood pressure levels, and satisfaction with provider communication and perceived difficulty getting needed care. We used hierarchical logistic regression models to adjust for clustering at the health plan and physician levels, as well as for physician and patient covariates. We adjusted for plan as a fixed effect, meaning we estimated variation between physicians using the variance within a particular health plan only, to minimize confounding by other unmeasured health plan variables.ResultsIn unadjusted analyses, patients of physicians who reported higher percent compensation from salary (>90%) were more likely to receive 5 of 7 diabetes process measures and more intensive lipid management and to have an HbA1c
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- 2007
32. Effect of generic-only drug benefits on seniors' medication use and financial burden.
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Tseng, Chien-Wen, Brook, Robert H, Keeler, Emmett, Steers, W Neil, Waitzfelder, Beth E, and Mangione, Carol M
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Aged ,Cost of Illness ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Drugs ,Generic ,Female ,Financing ,Personal ,Humans ,Insurance Coverage ,Insurance ,Health ,Male ,United States ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health Policy & Services ,Health services and systems - Abstract
BackgroundGeneric-only drug benefits are a way to provide some coverage, as opposed to no coverage.ObjectiveTo examine how switching from brand name to generic-only drug coverage affected seniors' medication use and financial burden.Study designData are from a 2002 cross-sectional survey conducted for a separate study on benefit caps. Participants belonged to a Medicare managed care plan in one state and had $2000 capped brand name benefits in 2001 but generic-only benefits in 2002.MethodsParticipants reported their cost-cutting strategies before and after the change to generic-only coverage, the medications affected, and their financial burden. We conducted bivariate and multivariate analyses of cost-cutting strategies and financial burden before and after implementation of generic-only benefits.ResultsAmong 611 participants (63% response), rates of switching medications increased after discontinuation of brand name coverage (27% vs 8%, P < .001). Switches were from brand name drugs to generic equivalents (14%) (eg, Prozac to fluoxetine hydrochloride), to nonequivalent generics (26%) (eg, Paxil to fluoxetine), and to different brand name drugs (45%) (eg, Paxil to Zoloft). Ninety percent of brand name switches remained in the same therapeutic class (eg, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors). After discontinuation of brand name coverage, participants reported higher rates of decreased medication use (28% vs 17%) and greater difficulty paying for prescriptions (65% vs 37%) (P < .001 for both).ConclusionsChanging from brand name benefits to generic-only drug coverage led many participants to switch to less expensive medications but also decreased medication use and increased financial burden. Insurers need to actively help patients adjust to a discontinuation of brand name coverage.
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- 2006
33. Are Physician Reimbursement Strategies Associated with Processes of Care and Patient Satisfaction for Patients with Diabetes in Managed Care?
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Ettner, Susan L, Thompson, Theodore J, Stevens, Mark R, Mangione, Carol M, Kim, Catherine, Steers, W Neil, Goewey, Jennifer, Brown, Arleen F, Chung, Richard S, Narayan, KM Venkat, and Group, the TRIAD Study
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Diabetes ,Health Services ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Good Health and Well Being ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Health Care Surveys ,Health Maintenance Organizations ,Humans ,Interviews as Topic ,Logistic Models ,Medical Audit ,Patient Satisfaction ,Physician Incentive Plans ,Practice Patterns ,Physicians' ,Quality of Health Care ,United States ,provider financial incentives ,reimbursement ,quality of care ,diabetes ,TRIAD Study Group ,Public Health and Health Services ,Policy and Administration ,Health Policy & Services ,Health services and systems ,Policy and administration - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine associations between physician reimbursement incentives and diabetes care processes and explore potential confounding with physician organizational model.Data sourcesPrimary data collected during 2000-2001 in 10 managed care plans.Study designMultilevel logistic regressions were used to estimate associations between reimbursement incentives and process measures, including the receipt of dilated eye exams, foot exams, influenza immunizations, advice to take aspirin, and assessments of glycemic control, proteinuria, and lipid profile. Reimbursement measures included the proportions of compensation received from salary, capitation, fee-for-service (FFS), and performance-based payment; the performance-based payment criteria used; and interactions of these criteria with the strength of the performance-based payment incentive.Data collectionPatient, provider group, and health plan surveys and medical record reviews were conducted for 6,194 patients with diabetes.Principal findingsWithout controlling for physician organizational model, care processes were better when physician compensation was based primarily on direct salary rather than FFS reimbursement (four of seven processes were better, with relative risks ranging from 1.13 to 1.23) or capitation (six were better, with relative risks from 1.06 to 1.36); and when quality/satisfaction scores influenced physician compensation (three were better, with relative risks from 1.17 to 1.26). However, these associations were substantially confounded by organizational model.ConclusionsPhysician reimbursement strategies are associated with diabetes care processes, although their independent contributions are difficult to assess, due to high correlation with physician organizational model. Regardless of causality, a group's use of quality/satisfaction scores to determine physician compensation may indicate delivery of high-quality diabetes care.
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- 2006
34. The association between quality of care and the intensity of diabetes disease management programs.
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Mangione, Carol M, Gerzoff, Robert B, Williamson, David F, Steers, W Neil, Kerr, Eve A, Brown, Arleen F, Waitzfelder, Beth E, Marrero, David G, Dudley, R Adams, Kim, Catherine, Herman, William, Thompson, Theodore J, Safford, Monika M, and Selby, Joe V
- Subjects
Diabetes ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Aged ,Blood Pressure ,Cholesterol ,LDL ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Disease Management ,Feedback ,Female ,Glycated Hemoglobin A ,Humans ,Male ,Managed Care Programs ,Middle Aged ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,Reminder Systems ,TRIAD Study Group ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
BackgroundAlthough disease management programs are widely implemented, little is known about their effectiveness.ObjectiveTo determine whether disease management by physician groups is associated with diabetes care processes, control of intermediate outcomes, or the amount of medication used when intermediate outcomes are above target levels.DesignCross-sectional study.SettingPatients were randomly sampled from 63 physician groups nested in 7 health plans sponsored by Translating Research into Action for Diabetes (87%) and from 4 health plans with individual physician contracts (13%).Patients8661 adults with diabetes who completed a survey (2000-2001) and had medical record data.MeasurementsPhysician group and health plan directors described their organizations' use of physician reminders, performance feedback, and structured care management on a survey; their responses were used to determine measures of intensity of disease management. The current study measured 8 processes of care, including most recent hemoglobin A1c level, systolic blood pressure, serum low-density lipoprotein cholesterol level, and several measures of medication use.ResultsIncreased use of any of 3 disease management strategies was significantly associated with higher adjusted rates of retinal screening, nephropathy screening, foot examinations, and measurement of hemoglobin A1c levels. Serum lipid level testing and influenza vaccine administration were associated with greater use of structured care management and performance feedback. Greater use of performance feedback correlated with an increased rate of foot examinations (difference, 5 percentage points [95% CI, 1 to 8 percentage points]), and greater use of physician reminders was associated with an increased rate of nephropathy screening (difference, 15 percentage points [CI, 6 to 23 percentage points]). No strategies were associated with intermediate outcome levels or level of medication management.LimitationsPhysician groups were not randomly sampled from population-based listings, and disease management strategies were not randomly allocated across groups.ConclusionsDisease management strategies were associated with better processes of diabetes care but not with improved intermediate outcomes or level of medication management. A greater focus on direct measurement, feedback, and reporting of intermediate outcome levels or of level of medication management may enhance the effectiveness of these programs.
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- 2006
35. Development of the 12-Item Expectations Regarding Aging Survey
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Sarkisian, Catherine A, Steers, W Neil, Hays, Ron D, and Mangione, Carol M
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Prevention ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Attitude to Health ,Data Collection ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Psychometrics ,United States ,measurement ,psychometrics ,factor analysis ,behavioral science ,attitudes toward health ,Clinical Sciences ,Gerontology - Abstract
PurposeThis study describes the development of a short version of the Expectations Regarding Aging Survey (ERA-38), a 38-item survey measuring expectations regarding aging.Design and methodsIn 1999, surveys containing the ERA-38 were mailed to 588 adults aged > or = 65 years who were recruited through physicians; 429 individuals (73%) returned completed surveys. The mean age of participants was 77 years; 76% were White. In 2001, we surveyed 643 adults aged > or = 65 years recruited at 14 senior centers. The mean age of participants was 78 years; 37% were Latino and 16% were African American. With the 1999 data, we selected items for the shorter version of the ERA-38 by using qualitative criteria and by evaluating the items' factor structure, internal consistency reliability of scales, and correlations with age and self-reported measures of health. Then, using the 2001 data, we evaluated the selected items with confirmatory factor analysis, and we reevaluated the internal consistency reliability and associations of the scales with age and self-reported measures of health.ResultsThe factor analyses of the ERA-12 on both samples provided support for three 4-item scales (expectations regarding physical health, expectations regarding mental health, and expectations regarding cognitive function), and one global expectations regarding aging scale combining all 12 items. In both samples, internal consistency reliability estimates for all scales exceeded 0.74, and the 12 items together explained over 88% of the variance in the ERA-38 total score. We found comparable associations of the ERA-12 scales with age and self-reported health measures in both samples.ImplicationsThe ERA-12 demonstrated acceptable reliability and validity to estimate expectations regarding aging.
- Published
- 2005
36. Using focus groups of older African Americans and Latinos with diabetes to modify a self-care empowerment intervention.
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Sarkisian, Catherine A, Brusuelas, Rebecca J, Steers, W Neil, Davidson, Mayer B, Brown, Arleen F, Norris, Keith C, Anderson, Robert M, and Mangione, Carol M
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Clinical Research ,Diabetes ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Black or African American ,Aged ,Community Health Centers ,Community-Institutional Relations ,Competency-Based Education ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Female ,Focus Groups ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Health Personnel ,Hispanic or Latino ,Humans ,Los Angeles ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Education as Topic ,Power ,Psychological ,Self Care ,diabetes mellitus ,focus groups ,self care ,aged ,Blacks ,Hispanic ,Americans ,African American ,Latino ,Public Health and Health Services ,Public Health - Abstract
ObjectiveTo make cultural and age-specific modifications to a self-care empowerment intervention.DesignFocus groups with self-administered surveys.SettingTwo public health diabetes and geriatrics clinic and two senior centers in and around South Los Angeles.ParticipantsAfrican Americans and Latinos aged > or = 55 years with diabetes (N=79), and two groups of health educators (N=16).Main outcome measuresAfter describing the proposed intervention, the focus group facilitators asked participants: 1) whether the community of interest would be interested in the proposed empowerment intervention; 2) why or why not; and 3) how the intervention could be modified to better address the concerns of the study community of interest. All groups were audiotaped, transcribed, and (when appropriate) translated into English. Three independent investigators read all transcripts and completed standardized coding forms for each transcript. In addition, at the end of each focus group, all participants completed a self-administered written survey asking them to rate aspects of the proposed intervention.ResultsOlder African Americans and Latinos endorsed the intervention but desired an expanded dietary educational component and identified disability as an important missing content area. Participants rejected the use of an audio learning tool and did not believe that matching group-facilitator sociodemographic characteristics was important as long as facilitators demonstrated cultural competency.ConclusionsThese findings illustrate a model of participatory research in which researchers and community members work together to develop an empowerment intervention that will meet community needs and will have greater cultural appropriateness. Modifying the intervention in accordance with these findings should enhance the relevance and impact of the self-care intervention.
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- 2005
37. Cost-Lowering Strategies Used by Medicare Beneficiaries Who Exceed Drug Benefit Caps and Have a Gap in Drug Coverage
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Tseng, Chien-Wen, Brook, Robert H, Keeler, Emmett, Steers, W Neil, and Mangione, Carol M
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Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Aging ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Cost Control ,Cost of Illness ,Drug Costs ,Female ,Humans ,Insurance ,Pharmaceutical Services ,Male ,Managed Care Programs ,Medicare Part C ,Patient Compliance ,Prescription Fees ,United States ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine - Abstract
ContextThe majority of Medicare drug benefits in managed care (Medicare + Choice) have annual dollar limits or caps and many beneficiaries face temporary but potentially significant gaps in coverage after exceeding caps before the end of the year. In the new national Medicare drug benefit, beneficiaries with high medication expenditures will also face a period without drug coverage when their total drug costs exceed annual caps but are not high enough to qualify for catastrophic coverage.ObjectiveTo describe strategies adopted by beneficiaries exceeding annual drug benefit caps to lower prescription costs, the type of medications involved, and their financial burden.Design, setting, and participantsA survey (completed in 2002) of Medicare + Choice beneficiaries aged 65 years and older with high medication costs and benefits capped on the plan's share of drug costs (65% response rate). The different caps offered in different counties were used as a natural experiment. Study participants (n = 665) exceeded a 750 dollars or 1200 dollars yearly cap in 2001 and had coverage gaps of 75 to 180 days. Control participants (n = 643) had 2000 dollars caps, which they did not exceed. Study and control participants were matched by average total drug expenditures per month.Main outcome measuresProportion of beneficiaries reporting specific strategies to decrease medication costs, medications affected, and difficulty paying for prescriptions.ResultsIn multivariate analyses adjusting for demographic and health characteristics, a higher proportion of patients exceeding caps reported using less prescribed medication than controls (18% vs 10%, respectively; P
- Published
- 2004
38. Hospital Catchment Areas Characteristics and Geographic Regions Associated With Higher COVID-19 Veterans Health Administration Hospitalization During the Omicron Surge
- Author
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Wong, Michelle S., primary, Frochen, Stephen, additional, Steers, W. Neil, additional, and Washington, Donna L., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A Quasi-experimental Evaluation of Performance Improvement Teams in the Safety-Net : A Labor-Management Partnership Model for Engaging Frontline Staff
- Author
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Laing, Brian Yoshio, Dixit, Ravi K., Berry, Sandra H., Steers, W. Neil, and Brook, Robert H.
- Published
- 2016
40. Provider discussion of health goals and psychosocial needs: Comparing older to younger veteran experience
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Cogan, Alison M., primary, Saliba, Debra, additional, Steers, W. Neil, additional, Frochen, Stephen, additional, Lynch, Kimberly A., additional, Ganz, David A., additional, and Washington, Donna L., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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41. Serious Mental Illness Diagnosis and COVID-19 Vaccine Uptake in the Veterans Health Administration
- Author
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Haderlein, Taona P., primary, Steers, W. Neil, additional, and Dobalian, Aram, additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
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42. Assessment of Exposure to Environmental Toxins and Racial and Ethnic Disparities in COVID-19 Hospitalizations Among US Veterans
- Author
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Wong, Michelle S., primary, Steers, W. Neil, additional, Frochen, Stephen, additional, and Washington, Donna L., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Time-motion analysis of emergency radiologists and emergency physicians at an urban academic medical center
- Author
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Perry, Warren M., Lee, Christoph I., Steers, W. Neil, Post, Lori A., and Forman, Howard P.
- Published
- 2013
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44. The Role of Community-Level Factors on Disparities in COVID-19 Infection Among American Indian/Alaska Native Veterans
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Wong, Michelle S., primary, Upchurch, Dawn M., additional, Steers, W. Neil, additional, Haderlein, Taona P., additional, Yuan, Anita T., additional, and Washington, Donna L., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Measuring Gender Role Conflict, Internalized Stigma, and Racial and Sexual Identity in Behaviorally Bisexual Black Men
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del Pino, Homero E., primary, Steers, W. Neil, additional, Lee, Martin, additional, McCuller, Jason, additional, Hays, Ron D., additional, and Harawa, Nina T., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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46. BMI and Risk for Severe COVID‐19 Among Veterans Health Administration Patients
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Breland, Jessica Y., primary, Wong, Michelle S., additional, Steers, W. Neil, additional, Yuan, Anita H., additional, Haderlein, Taona P., additional, and Washington, Donna L., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Cost-lowering strategies used by Medicare beneficiaries who exceed drug benefit caps and have a gap in drug coverage
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Chien-Wen Tseng, Brook, Robert H., Keeler, Emmett, Steers, W. Neil, and Mangione, Carol M.
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Company business management ,Medicare -- Management ,Medicare -- Economic aspects ,Medical care, Cost of -- Management - Abstract
Strategies adopted by beneficiaries exceeding annual drug benefit caps are described to lower prescription costs, the type of medications involved, and their financial burden. It is suggested that Medicare beneficiaries often decreased use of essential medications and experienced difficulty paying for prescriptions during gaps in coverage.
- Published
- 2004
48. Maternal disclosure of mothers' HIV serostatus to their children
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Murphy, Debra A., Steers W. Neil, and Stritto, Mary Ellen Dello
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Mother and child -- Psychological aspects ,HIV patients -- Family ,Domestic relations -- Psychological aspects ,Social networks -- Psychological aspects ,Children -- Psychological aspects ,Self-esteem -- Evaluation ,Family and marriage ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The authors study the effect on child when mothers disclose that they are HIV infected versus those HIV infected mothers who do not tell their children. Topics include social support systems, children's self-esteem, and mother to child relationship.
- Published
- 2001
49. Unmet Medical Needs Among Adults Who Move due to Unaffordable Housing: California Health Interview Survey, 2011–2017
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Chen, Katherine L., primary, Wisk, Lauren E., additional, Nuckols, Teryl K., additional, Elmore, Joann G., additional, Steers, W. Neil, additional, and Zimmerman, Frederick J., additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Race Differences in Patient Experience by Hispanic Ethnicity Among Veteran Health Administration Users
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Wong, Michelle S., primary, Steers, W. Neil, additional, Hoggatt, Katherine J., additional, Ziaeian, Boback, additional, and Washington, Donna L., additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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