Perceived barriers to medical care and mental health care among veterans with serious mental illness.

Amy L Drapalski, Jaime Milford, Richard W Goldberg, Clayton H Brown, Lisa B Dixon
Author Information
  1. Amy L Drapalski: Veterans Affairs Capitol Network (VISN 5) Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center, 6A-157, VA Maryland Healthcare System, 10 North Greene St., Baltimore, MD 21201, USA. amy.drapalski@va.gov

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This study examined perceived barriers to mental health care and medical care and the relationship between demographic and clinical characteristics and perceived barriers among veterans with serious mental illness.
METHODS: Veterans diagnosed as having serious mental illnesses, hospitalized for psychiatric concerns, and at risk for treatment dropout (N=136) completed an interview as part of a larger study of a critical time intervention.
RESULTS: Many participants perceived barriers to accessing mental health care (67%) and medical care (60%). Personal factors were cited most often as barriers; overall, however, personal barriers were more likely to be perceived to impede mental health care (56%) than medical care (43%). Psychiatric symptoms were associated with greater perceived barriers to mental health care and medical care.
CONCLUSIONS: Veterans with serious mental illness at risk of treatment dropout perceived barriers to mental health care and medical services. Strategies to overcome barriers are needed and should target illness-related factors that may impede service use.

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Female
Health Services Accessibility
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Male
Mental Health Services
Middle Aged
Severity of Illness Index
United States
Veterans

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0carementalbarriersperceivedhealthmedicalseriousillnessstudyamongveteransVeteransrisktreatmentdropoutfactorsimpedeOBJECTIVES:examinedrelationshipdemographicclinicalcharacteristicsMETHODS:diagnosedillnesseshospitalizedpsychiatricconcernsN=136completedinterviewpartlargercriticaltimeinterventionRESULTS:Manyparticipantsaccessing67%60%Personalcitedoftenoverallhoweverpersonallikely56%43%PsychiatricsymptomsassociatedgreaterCONCLUSIONS:servicesStrategiesovercomeneededtargetillness-relatedmayserviceusePerceived

Similar Articles

Cited By