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The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of Military and Veteran Healthcare

The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

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Page 1: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences

Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D.Data Recognition Corporation (DRC)Institute for the Advancement of Military and Veteran Healthcare

Page 2: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Introduction

Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) is a large, woman-owned business which focuses on survey and healthcare research, educational testing, and document production.

Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D., Senior Director of Research and Director of the DRC Institute for the Advancement of Military and Veteran Healthcare, is a clinical psychologist who completed his training in the Boston VA system, the National Center for PTSD, Harvard University Medical School, and Boston University Medical School.

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Page 3: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Introduction

Dr. Greenberg is a researcher whose focus has been on Military and Veteran mental healthcare, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), complex co-occurring disorders, depression, anxiety, substance abuse, suicide, and healthcare quality and fidelity.

Dr. Greenberg has published on PTSD and TBI and depression amongst Military and Veteran populations. He has served as a subject matter expert for Navy Medicine and DoD Medicine, where he has focused and advised senior leaders on mental health, clinical care, training, and policy.

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Page 4: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Overview of the Survey

Collaboration between the American Legion and Data Recognition Corporation (DRC)

Exploratory research regarding

• Type of care patients report receiving for PTSD and TBI• Patients’ perceptions of effectiveness of treatment• Patients’ reports of access to a range of treatment

options, including Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM)

Quick turnaround study First step in long-range program to encourage treatment

options and fidelity to treatment protocols4

Page 5: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Need for the Research

Limited information on types of treatment Veterans receive

Limited research documenting fidelity to treatment models

Limited knowledge about use of CAM

Limited evidence of effectiveness of CAM

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Page 6: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Purpose of the Survey

To obtain a snapshot of what treatments Veterans are receiving and how they perceive them; and

To obtain information to help guide more rigorous, in-depth research to support the establishment of treatment models and an eventual system of fidelity modeling.

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Page 7: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Methodology

Web survey (opt-in)

Content: demographics, treatment received, access to CAM, perceived change in symptoms and reasons for treatment termination

Press releases and social marketing to recruit respondents

30-day field period

Analysis: frequencies and other descriptive statistics

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Page 8: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Key Findings

Respondents reported common symptoms: Elevated Anger, Pain, Sleep Problems, Anxiety, Depression and Irritability.

For PTSD, individuals are receiving multiple therapy types with fewer than a quarter of respondents receiving treatment in conformity to DoD/VA evidence-based practice models of care.

Page 9: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Key Findings (continued)

For TBI, individuals are receiving a wide array of treatment types.

Medication appears to be the front line treatment reported by respondents.

A sizable proportion of respondents reported prescriptions of up to 10 medications for PTSD/TBI across their treatment experience.

Page 10: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Key Findings (continued)

Broadly, respondents reported limited change following treatment for PTSD and TBI:

• Following therapy, the majority of respondents reported no change or worsening of symptoms;

• Following medication, a slight majority reported no change or worsening of symptoms; and

• In general, approximately half of all respondents reported no change or minimal improvement in symptoms.

Page 11: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Key Findings (continued)

Nearly half of all respondents had discussed some type of CAM-based treatment with their providers.

Respondents reported numerous types of CAM treatments, especially Meditation, Relaxation, and Stress Reduction.

Page 12: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Key Findings (continued)

30 percent of respondents indicated they had terminated treatment prior to completion.

An array of rationales for treatment termination were reported.

In declining order, the rationales cited were: Lack of Improvement, Side Effects, Dissatisfied with Provider, Solve Problems on My Own, Time Burden or Distance to Treatment, and Stigma

Page 13: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Survey Response

14,734 views overall, with nearly 480 per day

3,209 starts

3,116 completions (nearly 22 percent of viewers became completers)

17-minute average completion time

98 percent of completers in the United States

74 percent used laptop,16 used percent smart phone, 10 percent used tablet

97 percent Veteran, 3 percent spouse or other

Page 14: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Respondent Characteristics

Page 15: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Respondent Characteristics

Page 16: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Service-Connected Disability

Page 17: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Service-Connected Disability

Page 18: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Community

Page 19: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Location of Care Received

Page 20: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Care Received at a Private Facility

Page 21: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Frequency of Care for PTSD and/or TBI

Page 22: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Provider Type

Page 23: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Symptom Architecture and Severity

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

Intensity

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Symptom Architecture and Severity

2560

2580

2600

2620

2640

2660

2680

2700

2720

Severity

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Symptom Ratings

Page 26: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Level of Perceived Improvement

10 point Likert scale: 1= I got worse, 5 = No change, and 10 = I got better

Page 27: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Symptom Change Following Therapies

N = 2,309 (41% report improvement and 59% report no change or worsened)

Page 28: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Symptom Change Following Medication

N = 2,212 (48% report improvement and 52% report no change or worsened)

Page 29: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

PTSD Treatment Type

Page 30: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

TBI Treatment Type

Page 31: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Prescriptions for PTSD and TBI

Page 32: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Discussed CAM Treatments with Provider

Page 33: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

CAM Treatment Type for PTSD

Page 34: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

CAM Treatment Type for TBI

Page 35: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Terminated Treatment Prior to Completion

Page 36: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Reason Given for Terminating Treatment

Page 37: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Recommendations

To establish a knowledge base on the care of Veterans with PTSD and TBI, a multi-step program of research is needed over a period of years:

• Establishment of baseline date, building on information gathered here, but probing more deeply and capturing data suitable for correlations and statistical modeling;

• Surveys to track progress over time;• Funding of demonstration programs to test effectiveness of

alternative treatments and to generate best practices and models of care as well as update practice guidelines with new findings; and

• Establishment of system for monitoring and evaluating fidelity of care.

Page 38: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Recommendations (continued)

Simultaneously, a second track of research and development is needed to ensure the availability of a trained work force prepared to treat PTSD and TBI. That will entail steps parallel to the development of models of care:

• Ancillary research on professional development related to treatment of PTSD and TBI;

• Development of professional standards and collaboration with schools to build curricula that support standards of care;

• Establishment of a National Advisory Group to plan the multi-step research program; and

• Regular tracking surveys.

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Page 39: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Next Steps

Establish a National Advisory Group to plan the multi-step research program.

Refine survey design in preparation for collection of baseline data and tracking surveys.

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Page 40: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Timeline

FY 2015: Establish National Advisory Group. FY 2016: Begin Research:

• Conduct Research to Establish Baseline on Treatment of PTSD and TBI; and

• Conduct Research on Professional Development. FY 2017:

• Announce 3-Year Demonstration Program; and• Establish Work Group to Collaborate with Professional Schools.

FY 2018: First Tracking Survey.

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Page 41: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Timeline (continued)

FY 2020: Second Tracking Survey. FY 2021: Establish Practice Guidelines/Models of Care. FY 2022: Establish Monitoring and Evaluation System to Measure

Fidelity to Models of Care, Examining both Treatment Provided and Professional Development of Health Care Providers.

FY 2022 and Beyond:

• Continue Bi-annual Tracking Surveys/Integrate with Monitoring.• Process for Ongoing Integration of Tested Innovations.

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Page 42: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Thank You

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Page 43: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Backup Slides

Page 44: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Anger

Page 45: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Pain

Page 46: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Sleep Problems

Page 47: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Anxiety

Page 48: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Depression

Page 49: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Irritability

Page 50: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Tour of Duty

Page 51: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Telehealth

Page 52: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Travel Time

Page 53: The American Legion Survey of Patient Healthcare Experiences Jeff Greenberg, Ph.D. Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) Institute for the Advancement of

Treatment Mode