Access to Pain Care From Compensation Clinics: A Relational Coordination Perspective

Marc I Rosen, Steve Martino, John Sellinger, Christina M Lazar, Brenda T Fenton, Kristin Mattocks, Marc I Rosen, Steve Martino, John Sellinger, Christina M Lazar, Brenda T Fenton, Kristin Mattocks

Abstract

Background: The Compensation and Pension (C&P) determination process is a potential gateway to accessing pain treatment in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA). However, attitudes about C&P as a gateway and about collaboration with C&P clinics among VHA staff are unknown.

Methods: In preparation for an initiative to link veterans seeking compensation for musculoskeletal disorders to treatment, clinical and administrative staff from the 8 VHA medical centers in New England were invited to complete a relational coordination survey that examined how different workgroups collaborate (communication and relationships) to provide pain care to veterans. A subset of those staff also participated in a semistructured interview about pain treatment referral practices within their medical centers. VHA staff were from primary care, administration, pain management, and C&P teams.

Results: Eighty-three VHA staff were invited to complete the relational coordination survey; 66 completed the survey and 39 participated in the semistructured interview. Most C&P staff interviewed thought of the compensation examination as a forensic process and that C&P-based efforts to engage veterans might interfere with the examination or were not their responsibility. However, some examiners described their efforts to determine new veterans' eligibility for VHA care and to connect them to specific treatments. VHA staff reported that there was little communication between the C&P team and other teams. The survey results supported this finding. The C&P group's relational coordination composite scores were lower than any other workgroup.

Conclusion: Outreach to veterans at New England C&P clinics was inconsistent, and C&P teams rated low on a measure of coordination with workgroups involved in pain treatment. Compensation examinations appear to be underused opportunities to help veterans access treatment. C&P-based treatment engagement is feasible; it is being done by some Compensation teams.

Conflict of interest statement

Author disclosures The authors report no actual or potential conflicts of interest with regard to this article.

Copyright © 2020 Frontline Medical Communications Inc., Parsippany, NJ, USA.

Source: PubMed

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