Measuring the unmet needs of American military Veterans and their caregivers: Survey protocol of the HERO CARE survey

Author:

Dang Stuti1234ORCID,Garcia‐Davis Sandra4,Noël Polly H.156,Hansen Jared178,Brintz Benjamin J.178,Munoz Richard9,Valencia Rodrigo Willy Marcos10,Rupper Rand11112,Bouldin Erin D.1711ORCID,Trivedi Ranak11314,Penney Lauren S.15,Pugh Mary Jo178,Kinosian Bruce16ORCID,Intrator Orna1718,Leykum Luci K.1519,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Veterans Affairs Elizabeth Dole Center of Excellence for Veteran and Caregiver Research San Antonio Texas USA

2. Miami VA Healthcare System, Geriatric Research, Education, & Clinical Center GRECC Miami Florida USA

3. Division of Geriatrics and Gerontology, Department of Medicine University of Miami School of Medicine Miami Florida USA

4. Department of Public Health Sciences University of Miami Coral Gables Florida USA

5. South Texas Veterans Health Care System San Antonio Texas USA

6. School of Medicine, Family & Community Medicine University of Texas Health San Antonio San Antonio Texas USA

7. VA Salt Lake City Health Care System, IDEAS Center Salt Lake City Utah USA

8. Division of Epidemiology University of Utah Health Salt Lake City Utah USA

9. Robert Stempel College of Public Health & Social Work, Department of Health Policy & Management Florida International University Miami Florida USA

10. Cleveland Clinic Endocrinology & Metabolism Institute Cleveland Ohio USA

11. Department of Internal Medicine University of Utah Salt Lake City Utah USA

12. GRECC George E. Wahlen Veteran Affairs Medical Center Salt Lake City Utah USA

13. Department of Psych/Public Mental Health Population Sciences Stanford University Stanford California USA

14. Center for Innovation to Implementation VA Palo Alto Healthcare System Palo Alto California USA

15. Center for Scientific Review National Institutes of Health Bethesda Maryland USA

16. Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Geriatrics University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

17. Geriatrics & Extended Care Data Analysis Center and Finger Lakes Healthcare System, Canandaigua Veterans Affairs Medical Center Canandaigua New York USA

18. Department of Public Health Sciences University of Rochester Rochester New York USA

19. Department of Internal Medicine University of Texas at Austin Dell Medical School Austin Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundEmpowering Veterans to age in place is a Department of Veterans Affairs priority. Family or unpaid caregivers play an important role in supporting Veterans to achieve this goal. Effectively meeting the needs of Veterans and caregivers requires identifying unmet needs and relevant gaps in resources to address those needs.MethodsUsing a modified Socio‐Ecological Model, we developed a prospective longitudinal panel design survey. We randomly selected 20,000 community‐dwelling Veterans enrolled in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), across five VHA sites. We oversampled Veterans with a higher predicted 2‐year long‐term institutional care (LTIC) risk. Veterans were mailed a packet containing a Veteran survey and a caregiver survey, to be answered by their caregiver if they had one. The Veteran survey assessed the following health‐related domains: physical, mental, social determinants of health, and caregiver assistance. Caregivers completed questions regarding their demographic factors, caregiving activities, impact of caregiving, use of VA and non‐VA services, and caregiver support resources. Follow‐up surveys will be repeated twice at 12‐month intervals for the same respondents. This article describes the HERO CARE survey protocol, content, and response rates.ResultsWe received responses from 8,056 Veterans and 3,579 caregivers between July 2021 and January 2022, with 95.6% being received via mail. Veteran respondents were mostly males (96.5%), over 65 years of age (94.9%), married (55.0%), Non‐Hispanic White (75.2%), and residing in urban areas (80.7%).ConclusionsThis longitudinal survey is unique in its comprehensive assessment of domains relevant to older Veterans stratified by LTIC risk and their caregivers, focusing on social determinants, caregiver support, and the use of caregiver support resources. Survey data will be linked to Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and VA data. The results of this study will inform better planning of non‐institutional care services and policy for Veterans and their caregivers.

Funder

Health Services Research and Development

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology

Reference60 articles.

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