Barriers to accessing pain management services among veterans with bipolar disorder

Author:

Travaglini Letitia E.1ORCID,Bennett Melanie12,Kacmarek Corinne N.12,Kuykendall Lorrianne3,Coakley Gabriella14,Lucksted Alicia12

Affiliation:

1. VA Capitol Health Care Network (VISN 5) Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center (MIRECC), VA Maryland Health Care System Baltimore Maryland USA

2. Department of Psychiatry University of Maryland School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA

3. Office of Research and Development, Washington DC VA Medical Center Washington DC USA

4. Department of Psychology Loyola University Maryland Baltimore Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo identify barriers veterans with bipolar disorder face to accessing chronic pain management services within a Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system.Data Sources and Study SettingVeterans (n = 15) with chronic pain and bipolar disorder and providers (n = 15) working within a mid‐Atlantic VA health care system. Data were collected from August 2017–June 2018.Study DesignVeteran interviews focused on their chronic pain experiences and treatment, including barriers that arose when trying to access pain management services. Provider interviews focused on whether they address chronic pain with veteran patients and, if so, what considerations arise when addressing pain in veterans with bipolar disorder and other serious mental illnesses.Data CollectionVeterans were at least 18 years old, had a confirmed bipolar disorder and chronic pain diagnosis, and engaged in outpatient care within the VA health care system. Clinicians provided direct care services to veterans within the same VA. Interviews lasted approximately 60 min and were transcribed and analyzed using a rapid analysis protocol.Principal FindingsFour major themes emerged from veteran and provider interviews: siloed care (unintegrated and uncoordinated mental and physical health care), mental health primacy (prioritization of mental health symptoms at expense of physical health symptoms), lagging expectations (unfamiliarity with comprehensive evidence‐based pain management options), and provider–patient communication concerns (inefficient communication about pain concerns and treatment options).ConclusionsVeterans with co‐occurring pain and bipolar disorder face unique barriers that compromise equitable access to evidence‐based pain treatment. Our findings suggest that educating providers about bipolar disorder and other serious mental illnesses and the benefit of effective non‐pharmacological pain interventions for this group may improve care coordination and care quality and reduce access disparities.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Health Policy

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