Affiliation:
1. Behavioral VA Careline VA Western New York Healthcare System Buffalo New York USA
2. Department of Psychology, 204 Park Hall University at Buffalo Buffalo New York USA
3. Center for Integrated Healthcare VA Western New York Healthcare System Buffalo New York USA
4. Department of Counseling, School, and Educational Psychology, 409 Baldy Hall University at Buffalo Buffalo New York USA
5. Center for Integrated Healthcare Syracuse VA Medical Center Syracuse New York USA
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveDescribe health service utilization in women veterans with eating disorder symptoms and characterize the nature of mental health services received.MethodWomen veterans (N = 191) in a northeastern Veterans Health Administration region completed the Eating Disorders Examination Questionnaire. Health service utilization was then observed for 5 years across multiple domains (i.e., mental health, primary care, telephone consultations, emergency services); negative binomial or zero‐inflated negative binomial regression models (mental health) estimated the relative impact of reported eating disorder symptoms on health service utilization.ResultsAfter adjusting for the effects of age and body mass index, higher eating disorder symptoms were associated with higher primary care, mental health services, and telephone consultations. Eating disorder diagnoses were infrequent across the sample.DiscussionWomen veterans with higher self‐reported eating disorder symptoms evidence higher health service utilization across common healthcare domains. Encounter data suggest that eating disorder symptoms are rarely identified or clinically addressed by providers. Existing mental health visits may represent an opportunity for selective screening for eating disorder symptoms, particularly among women who evidence known risk factors.Public SignificanceThis study reveals that women veterans with higher levels of eating disorder symptoms (e.g., dietary restriction, poor body image) use more primary care, mental health, and telephone consultations than others, but may not receive services that target disordered eating. Opportunities may exist to better identify eating disorder symptoms in the context of existing mental health visits, or potentially to combine treatment for eating disorder symptoms into their mental health care.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health