Journal of Primary Care & Community Health (Feb 2021)

Enhancing Primary Care Experiences for Homeless Patients with Serious Mental Illness: Results from a National Survey

  • Sonya Gabrielian,
  • Audrey L. Jones,
  • April E. Hoge,
  • Aerin J. deRussy,
  • Young-il Kim,
  • Ann Elizabeth Montgomery,
  • John R. Blosnich,
  • Adam J. Gordon,
  • Lillian Gelberg,
  • Erika L. Austin,
  • David Pollio,
  • Sally K. Holmes,
  • Allyson L. Varley,
  • Stefan G. Kertesz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2150132721993654
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

Objectives: Patients experiencing homelessness (PEH) with serious mental illness (SMI) have poor satisfaction with primary care. We assessed if primary care teams tailored for homeless patients (Homeless-Patient Aligned Care Teams (H-PACTs)) provide this population with superior experiences than mainstream primary care and explored whether integrated behavioral health and social services were associated with favorable experiences. Methods: We surveyed VA PEH with SMI (n = 1095) to capture the valence of their primary care experiences in 4 domains (Access/Coordination, Patient-Clinician Relationships, Cooperation, and Homeless-Specific Needs). We surveyed clinicians (n = 52) from 29 H-PACTs to elucidate if their clinics had embedded mental health, addiction, social work, and/or housing services. We counted these services in each H-PACT (0-4) and classified H-PACTs as having high (3-4) versus low (0-2) service integration. We controlled for demographics, housing history, and needs in comparing H-PACT versus mainstream experiences; and experiences in high versus low integration H-PACTs. Results: Among respondents, 969 (91%) had complete data and 626 (62%) were in H-PACTs. After covariate adjustment, compared to mainstream respondents, H-PACT respondents were more likely ( P < .01) to report favorable experiences (AORs = 1.7-2.1) and less likely to report unfavorable experiences (AORs = 0.5-0.6) in all 4 domains. Of 29 H-PACTs, 27.6% had high integration. High integration H-PACT respondents were twice as likely as low integration H-PACT respondents to report favorable access/coordination experiences (AOR = 1.7). Conclusions: Homeless-tailored clinics with highly-integrated services were associated with better care experiences among PEH with SMI. These observational data suggest that tailored primary care with integrated services may improve care perceptions among complex patients.