Consideration of substance use in compensation and pension examinations of veterans filing PTSD claims.

Veterans filing claims that service-induced PTSD impairs them worry that claims examiners may attribute their difficulties to conditions other than PTSD, such as substance use. Substance use commonly co-occurs with PTSD and complicates establishing a PTSD diagnosis because symptoms may be explained...

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Main Authors: Rebecca L Jankowski, Anne C Black, Christina M Lazar, Bradley R Brummett, Marc I Rosen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210938
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spelling doaj-e33fab060e79480eb14c18d0249e104c2021-03-03T20:54:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01142e021093810.1371/journal.pone.0210938Consideration of substance use in compensation and pension examinations of veterans filing PTSD claims.Rebecca L JankowskiAnne C BlackChristina M LazarBradley R BrummettMarc I RosenVeterans filing claims that service-induced PTSD impairs them worry that claims examiners may attribute their difficulties to conditions other than PTSD, such as substance use. Substance use commonly co-occurs with PTSD and complicates establishing a PTSD diagnosis because symptoms may be explained by PTSD alone, PTSD-induced substance use, or by a substance use condition independent of PTSD. These alternative explanations of symptoms lead to different conclusions about whether a PTSD diagnosis can be made. How substance use impacts an examiner's diagnosis of PTSD in a Veteran's service-connection claim has not been previously studied. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that mention of risky substance use in the Compensation & Pension (C&P) examination would result in a lower likelihood of service-connection award, presumably because substance use reflected an alternative explanation for symptoms. Data were analyzed from 208 Veterans' C&P examinations, medical records, and confidentially-collected research assessments. In this sample, 165/208 (79%) Veterans' claims were approved for a mental health condition; 70/83 (84%) with risky substance use mentioned and 95/125 (76%) without risky use mentioned (p = .02). Contrary to the a priori hypothesis, Veterans with risky substance use were more likely to get a service-connection award, even after controlling for baseline PTSD severity and other potential confounds. They had almost twice the odds of receiving any mental health award and 2.4 times greater odds of receiving an award for PTSD specifically. These data contradict assertions of bias against Veterans with risky substance use when their claims are reviewed. The data are more consistent with substance use often being judged as a symptom of PTSD. The more liberal granting of awards is consistent with literature concerning comorbid PTSD and substance use, and with claims procedures that make it more likely that substance use will be attributed to trauma exposure than to other causes.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210938
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rebecca L Jankowski
Anne C Black
Christina M Lazar
Bradley R Brummett
Marc I Rosen
spellingShingle Rebecca L Jankowski
Anne C Black
Christina M Lazar
Bradley R Brummett
Marc I Rosen
Consideration of substance use in compensation and pension examinations of veterans filing PTSD claims.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Rebecca L Jankowski
Anne C Black
Christina M Lazar
Bradley R Brummett
Marc I Rosen
author_sort Rebecca L Jankowski
title Consideration of substance use in compensation and pension examinations of veterans filing PTSD claims.
title_short Consideration of substance use in compensation and pension examinations of veterans filing PTSD claims.
title_full Consideration of substance use in compensation and pension examinations of veterans filing PTSD claims.
title_fullStr Consideration of substance use in compensation and pension examinations of veterans filing PTSD claims.
title_full_unstemmed Consideration of substance use in compensation and pension examinations of veterans filing PTSD claims.
title_sort consideration of substance use in compensation and pension examinations of veterans filing ptsd claims.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Veterans filing claims that service-induced PTSD impairs them worry that claims examiners may attribute their difficulties to conditions other than PTSD, such as substance use. Substance use commonly co-occurs with PTSD and complicates establishing a PTSD diagnosis because symptoms may be explained by PTSD alone, PTSD-induced substance use, or by a substance use condition independent of PTSD. These alternative explanations of symptoms lead to different conclusions about whether a PTSD diagnosis can be made. How substance use impacts an examiner's diagnosis of PTSD in a Veteran's service-connection claim has not been previously studied. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that mention of risky substance use in the Compensation & Pension (C&P) examination would result in a lower likelihood of service-connection award, presumably because substance use reflected an alternative explanation for symptoms. Data were analyzed from 208 Veterans' C&P examinations, medical records, and confidentially-collected research assessments. In this sample, 165/208 (79%) Veterans' claims were approved for a mental health condition; 70/83 (84%) with risky substance use mentioned and 95/125 (76%) without risky use mentioned (p = .02). Contrary to the a priori hypothesis, Veterans with risky substance use were more likely to get a service-connection award, even after controlling for baseline PTSD severity and other potential confounds. They had almost twice the odds of receiving any mental health award and 2.4 times greater odds of receiving an award for PTSD specifically. These data contradict assertions of bias against Veterans with risky substance use when their claims are reviewed. The data are more consistent with substance use often being judged as a symptom of PTSD. The more liberal granting of awards is consistent with literature concerning comorbid PTSD and substance use, and with claims procedures that make it more likely that substance use will be attributed to trauma exposure than to other causes.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210938
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