Physical functioning and mental health treatment initiation and retention for veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder: a prospective cohort study

Abstract Background Most US adults with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) do not initiate mental health treatment within a year of diagnosis. Increasing treatment uptake can improve health and quality of life for those with PTSD. Individuals with PTSD are more likely to report poor physical funct...

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Main Authors: Wei Duan-Porter, David B. Nelson, Kristine E. Ensrud, Michele R. Spoont
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-09-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-021-07035-6
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spelling doaj-e72f3430f1c342f1a069368bf38667bd2021-09-26T11:10:11ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632021-09-0121111010.1186/s12913-021-07035-6Physical functioning and mental health treatment initiation and retention for veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder: a prospective cohort studyWei Duan-Porter0David B. Nelson1Kristine E. Ensrud2Michele R. Spoont3Center for Care Delivery & Outcomes Research, Minneapolis VA Health Care SystemCenter for Care Delivery & Outcomes Research, Minneapolis VA Health Care SystemCenter for Care Delivery & Outcomes Research, Minneapolis VA Health Care SystemCenter for Care Delivery & Outcomes Research, Minneapolis VA Health Care SystemAbstract Background Most US adults with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) do not initiate mental health treatment within a year of diagnosis. Increasing treatment uptake can improve health and quality of life for those with PTSD. Individuals with PTSD are more likely to report poor physical functioning, which may contribute to difficulty with treatment initiation and retention. We sought to determine the effects of poor physical functioning on mental health treatment initiation and retention for individuals with PTSD. Methods We used data for a national cohort of veterans in VA care; diagnosed with PTSD in June 2008-July 2009; with no mental health treatment in the prior year; and who responded to baseline surveys on physical functioning and PTSD symptoms (n = 6,765). Physical functioning was assessed using Veterans RAND 12-item Short Form Health Survey, and encoded as limitations in physical functioning and role limitations due to physical health. Treatment initiation (within 6 months of diagnosis) was determined using VA data and categorized as none (reference), only medications, only psychotherapy, or both. Treatment retention was defined as having ≥ 4 months of appropriate antidepressant or ≥ 8 psychotherapy encounters. Results In multinomial models, greater limitations in physical functioning were associated with lower odds of initiating only psychotherapy (OR 0.82 [95 % CI 0.68, 0.97] for limited a little and OR 0.74 [0.61, 0.90] for limited a lot, compared to reference “Not limited at all”). However, it was not associated with initiation of medications alone (OR 1.04 [0.85, 1.28] for limited a little and OR 1.07 [0.86, 1.34] for limited a lot) or combined with psychotherapy (OR 1.03 [0.85, 1.25] for limited a little and OR 0.95 [0.78, 1.17] for limited a lot). Greater limitations in physical functioning were also associated with lower odds of psychotherapy retention (OR 0.69 [0.53, 0.89] for limited a lot) but not for medications (e.g., OR 0.96 [0.79, 1.17] for limited a lot). Role limitations was only associated with initiation of both medications and psychotherapy, but there was no effect gradient (OR 1.38 [1.03, 1.86] for limitations a little or some of the time, and OR 1.18 [0.63, 1.06] for most or all of the time, compared to reference “None of the time”). Accounting for chronic physical health conditions did not attenuate associations between limitations in physical functioning (or role limitations) and PTSD treatment; having more chronic conditions was associated with lower odds of both initiation and retention for all treatments (e.g., for 2 + conditions OR 0.53 [0.41, 0.67] for initiation of psychotherapy). Conclusions Greater limitations in physical functioning may be a barrier to psychotherapy initiation and retention. Future interventions addressing physical functioning may enhance uptake of psychotherapy.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-021-07035-6Physical limitationsRole limitationsPsychotherapyPTSD symptomsMultimorbidity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wei Duan-Porter
David B. Nelson
Kristine E. Ensrud
Michele R. Spoont
spellingShingle Wei Duan-Porter
David B. Nelson
Kristine E. Ensrud
Michele R. Spoont
Physical functioning and mental health treatment initiation and retention for veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder: a prospective cohort study
BMC Health Services Research
Physical limitations
Role limitations
Psychotherapy
PTSD symptoms
Multimorbidity
author_facet Wei Duan-Porter
David B. Nelson
Kristine E. Ensrud
Michele R. Spoont
author_sort Wei Duan-Porter
title Physical functioning and mental health treatment initiation and retention for veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder: a prospective cohort study
title_short Physical functioning and mental health treatment initiation and retention for veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder: a prospective cohort study
title_full Physical functioning and mental health treatment initiation and retention for veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder: a prospective cohort study
title_fullStr Physical functioning and mental health treatment initiation and retention for veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder: a prospective cohort study
title_full_unstemmed Physical functioning and mental health treatment initiation and retention for veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder: a prospective cohort study
title_sort physical functioning and mental health treatment initiation and retention for veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder: a prospective cohort study
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Background Most US adults with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) do not initiate mental health treatment within a year of diagnosis. Increasing treatment uptake can improve health and quality of life for those with PTSD. Individuals with PTSD are more likely to report poor physical functioning, which may contribute to difficulty with treatment initiation and retention. We sought to determine the effects of poor physical functioning on mental health treatment initiation and retention for individuals with PTSD. Methods We used data for a national cohort of veterans in VA care; diagnosed with PTSD in June 2008-July 2009; with no mental health treatment in the prior year; and who responded to baseline surveys on physical functioning and PTSD symptoms (n = 6,765). Physical functioning was assessed using Veterans RAND 12-item Short Form Health Survey, and encoded as limitations in physical functioning and role limitations due to physical health. Treatment initiation (within 6 months of diagnosis) was determined using VA data and categorized as none (reference), only medications, only psychotherapy, or both. Treatment retention was defined as having ≥ 4 months of appropriate antidepressant or ≥ 8 psychotherapy encounters. Results In multinomial models, greater limitations in physical functioning were associated with lower odds of initiating only psychotherapy (OR 0.82 [95 % CI 0.68, 0.97] for limited a little and OR 0.74 [0.61, 0.90] for limited a lot, compared to reference “Not limited at all”). However, it was not associated with initiation of medications alone (OR 1.04 [0.85, 1.28] for limited a little and OR 1.07 [0.86, 1.34] for limited a lot) or combined with psychotherapy (OR 1.03 [0.85, 1.25] for limited a little and OR 0.95 [0.78, 1.17] for limited a lot). Greater limitations in physical functioning were also associated with lower odds of psychotherapy retention (OR 0.69 [0.53, 0.89] for limited a lot) but not for medications (e.g., OR 0.96 [0.79, 1.17] for limited a lot). Role limitations was only associated with initiation of both medications and psychotherapy, but there was no effect gradient (OR 1.38 [1.03, 1.86] for limitations a little or some of the time, and OR 1.18 [0.63, 1.06] for most or all of the time, compared to reference “None of the time”). Accounting for chronic physical health conditions did not attenuate associations between limitations in physical functioning (or role limitations) and PTSD treatment; having more chronic conditions was associated with lower odds of both initiation and retention for all treatments (e.g., for 2 + conditions OR 0.53 [0.41, 0.67] for initiation of psychotherapy). Conclusions Greater limitations in physical functioning may be a barrier to psychotherapy initiation and retention. Future interventions addressing physical functioning may enhance uptake of psychotherapy.
topic Physical limitations
Role limitations
Psychotherapy
PTSD symptoms
Multimorbidity
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-021-07035-6
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