Comparing homeless persons' care experiences in tailored versus nontailored primary care programs.

Journal: American Journal Of Public Health
Published:
Abstract

Objective: We compared homeless patients' experiences of care in health care organizations that differed in their degree of primary care design service tailoring.

Methods: We surveyed homeless-experienced patients (either recently or currently homeless) at 3 Veterans Affairs (VA) mainstream primary care settings in Pennsylvania and Alabama, a homeless-tailored VA clinic in California, and a highly tailored non-VA Health Care for the Homeless Program in Massachusetts (January 2011-March 2012). We developed a survey, the "Primary Care Quality-Homeless Survey," to reflect the concerns and aspirations of homeless patients.

Results: Mean scores at the tailored non-VA site were superior to those from the 3 mainstream VA sites (P < .001). Adjusting for patient characteristics, these differences remained significant for subscales assessing the patient-clinician relationship (P < .001) and perceptions of cooperation among providers (P = .004). There were 1.5- to 3-fold increased odds of an unfavorable experience in the domains of the patient-clinician relationship, cooperation, and access or coordination for the mainstream VA sites compared with the tailored non-VA site; the tailored VA site attained intermediate results.

Conclusions: Tailored primary care service design was associated with a superior service experience for patients who experienced homelessness.

Authors
Stefan Kertesz, Cheryl Holt, Jocelyn Steward, Richard Jones, David Roth, Erin Stringfellow, Adam Gordon, Theresa Kim, Erika Austin, Stephen Henry, N Kay Johnson, U Shanette Granstaff, James O'connell, Joya Golden, Alexander Young, Lori Davis, David Pollio