Authors

  1. Kehle-Forbes, Shannon M. PhD
  2. Campbell, Emily Hagel MS
  3. Taylor, Brent C. PhD, MPH
  4. Scholten, Joel MD
  5. Sayer, Nina PhD

Abstract

Objective: To examine whether a traumatic brain injury (TBI) diagnosis was associated with increased outpatient service utilization and associated costs among Iraq and Afghanistan (Operation Enduring Freedom [OEF]/Operation Iraqi Freedom [OIF]/Operation New Dawn [OND]) War veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) who used Veterans Health Affairs (VHA) care in a 1-year period.

 

Setting: N/A.

 

Participants: OEF/OIF/OND veterans with a diagnosis of PTSD and/or TBI who utilized VHA services during fiscal year 2012 (N = 164 644).

 

Design: Observational study using VHA administrative data.

 

Main Measures: Outpatient VHA utilization (total and by category of care) and associated costs (total and by VA Health Economic Resource Center cost category).

 

Results: Veterans in the comorbid PTSD/TBI group had significantly more total outpatient appointment than veterans with PTSD but no TBI. This pattern held for all categories of care except orthopedics. The comorbid TBI/PTSD group ($5769) incurred greater median outpatient healthcare costs than the PTSD ($3168) or TBI-alone ($2815) group.

 

Conclusions: Co-occurring TBI increases the already high level of healthcare utilization by veterans with PTSD, suggesting that OEF/OIF/OND veterans with comorbid PTSD/TBI have complex and wide-ranging healthcare needs.