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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 3/2018

01-03-2018 | Original Research

Racial, Ethnic, and Gender Equity in Veteran Satisfaction with Health Care in the Veterans Affairs Health Care System

Authors: Susan L. Zickmund, PhD, Kelly H. Burkitt, PhD, Shasha Gao, PhD, Roslyn A. Stone, PhD, Audrey L. Jones, PhD, Leslie R. M. Hausmann, PhD, Galen E. Switzer, PhD, Sonya Borrero, PhD, Keri L. Rodriguez, PhD, Michael J. Fine, MD, MSc

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 3/2018

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Abstract

Background

Patient satisfaction is an important dimension of health care quality. The Veterans Health Administration (VA) is committed to providing high-quality care to an increasingly diverse patient population.

Objective

To assess Veteran satisfaction with VA health care by race/ethnicity and gender.

Design and Participants

We conducted semi-structured telephone interviews with gender-specific stratified samples of black, white, and Hispanic Veterans from 25 predominantly minority-serving VA Medical Centers from June 2013 to January 2015.

Main Measures

Satisfaction with health care was assessed in 16 domains using five-point Likert scales. We compared the proportions of Veterans who were very satisfied, somewhat satisfied, and less than satisfied (i.e., neither satisfied nor dissatisfied, somewhat dissatisfied, or very dissatisfied) in each domain, and used random-effects multinomial regression to estimate racial/ethnic differences by gender and gender differences by race/ethnicity.

Key Results

Interviews were completed for 1222 of the 1929 Veterans known to be eligible for the interview (63.3%), including 421 white, 389 black, and 396 Hispanic Veterans, 616 of whom were female. Veterans were less likely to be somewhat satisfied or less than satisfied versus very satisfied with care in each of the 16 domains. The highest satisfaction ratings were reported for costs, outpatient facilities, and pharmacy (74–76% very satisfied); the lowest ratings were reported for access, pain management, and mental health care (21–24% less than satisfied). None of the joint tests of racial/ethnic or gender differences in satisfaction (simultaneously comparing all three satisfaction levels) was statistically significant (p > 0.05). Pairwise comparisons of specific levels of satisfaction revealed racial/ethnic differences by gender in three domains and gender differences by race/ethnicity in five domains, with no consistent directionality across demographic subgroups.

Conclusions

Our multisite interviews of a diverse sample of Veterans at primarily minority-serving sites showed generally high levels of health care satisfaction across 16 domains, with few quantitative differences by race/ethnicity or gender.
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Metadata
Title
Racial, Ethnic, and Gender Equity in Veteran Satisfaction with Health Care in the Veterans Affairs Health Care System
Authors
Susan L. Zickmund, PhD
Kelly H. Burkitt, PhD
Shasha Gao, PhD
Roslyn A. Stone, PhD
Audrey L. Jones, PhD
Leslie R. M. Hausmann, PhD
Galen E. Switzer, PhD
Sonya Borrero, PhD
Keri L. Rodriguez, PhD
Michael J. Fine, MD, MSc
Publication date
01-03-2018
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 3/2018
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-017-4221-9

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