Veterans' compensation claims beliefs predict timing of PTSD treatment use relative to compensation and pension exam.

<h4>Introduction</h4>In this study we developed the Disability Beliefs Scale to assess Veterans' beliefs that engaging in treatment, as well as other behaviors, would affect the likelihood of a Veteran's being awarded disability-related benefits. We posited that Veterans with s...

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Main Authors: Anne C Black, Sarah Meshberg-Cohen, Andric C Perez-Ortiz, Thomas A Thornhill, Marc I Rosen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209488
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spelling doaj-f13817bd91fb47d886740fcd407f64412021-03-04T10:39:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011312e020948810.1371/journal.pone.0209488Veterans' compensation claims beliefs predict timing of PTSD treatment use relative to compensation and pension exam.Anne C BlackSarah Meshberg-CohenAndric C Perez-OrtizThomas A ThornhillMarc I Rosen<h4>Introduction</h4>In this study we developed the Disability Beliefs Scale to assess Veterans' beliefs that engaging in treatment, as well as other behaviors, would affect the likelihood of a Veteran's being awarded disability-related benefits. We posited that Veterans with stronger beliefs that attending mental health treatment would facilitate a service-connection award would be more likely to attend PTSD treatment before their compensation and pension examinations for PTSD.<h4>Methods</h4>Electronic health records for 307 post-9/11-era Veterans applying for compensation and pension for service-connected PTSD and engaging in a clinical trial of a treatment-referral intervention were analyzed for PTSD-specific and more general mental health treatment use around the time of their compensation examinations. All participants completed the Disability Beliefs Scale and other baseline assessments. Multilevel models assessed change in treatment use as a function of time relative to the C&P exam, compensation examination status (before or after), and the interaction between examination status and beliefs about treatment benefits.<h4>Results</h4>No main effects of time or examination status were observed. As hypothesized, beliefs about treatment benefits moderated the effect of examination status on PTSD treatment use. Veterans believing more strongly that mental health treatment would help a claim differentially attended PTSD treatment before the examination than after. The effect was not observed for general mental health treatment use.<h4>Conclusion</h4>The association between Veterans' use of PTSD treatment and their service-connection examination status was moderated by beliefs that receiving treatment affects the service-connection decision. This suggests that factors reported to motivate seeking service-connection-finances, validation of Veterans' experiences, and the involvement of significant others-might also help motivate Veterans' use of effective PTSD treatments. However, the results reflect correlations that could be explained in other ways, and service-connection was one of many factors impacting PTSD treatment engagement.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209488
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anne C Black
Sarah Meshberg-Cohen
Andric C Perez-Ortiz
Thomas A Thornhill
Marc I Rosen
spellingShingle Anne C Black
Sarah Meshberg-Cohen
Andric C Perez-Ortiz
Thomas A Thornhill
Marc I Rosen
Veterans' compensation claims beliefs predict timing of PTSD treatment use relative to compensation and pension exam.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Anne C Black
Sarah Meshberg-Cohen
Andric C Perez-Ortiz
Thomas A Thornhill
Marc I Rosen
author_sort Anne C Black
title Veterans' compensation claims beliefs predict timing of PTSD treatment use relative to compensation and pension exam.
title_short Veterans' compensation claims beliefs predict timing of PTSD treatment use relative to compensation and pension exam.
title_full Veterans' compensation claims beliefs predict timing of PTSD treatment use relative to compensation and pension exam.
title_fullStr Veterans' compensation claims beliefs predict timing of PTSD treatment use relative to compensation and pension exam.
title_full_unstemmed Veterans' compensation claims beliefs predict timing of PTSD treatment use relative to compensation and pension exam.
title_sort veterans' compensation claims beliefs predict timing of ptsd treatment use relative to compensation and pension exam.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description <h4>Introduction</h4>In this study we developed the Disability Beliefs Scale to assess Veterans' beliefs that engaging in treatment, as well as other behaviors, would affect the likelihood of a Veteran's being awarded disability-related benefits. We posited that Veterans with stronger beliefs that attending mental health treatment would facilitate a service-connection award would be more likely to attend PTSD treatment before their compensation and pension examinations for PTSD.<h4>Methods</h4>Electronic health records for 307 post-9/11-era Veterans applying for compensation and pension for service-connected PTSD and engaging in a clinical trial of a treatment-referral intervention were analyzed for PTSD-specific and more general mental health treatment use around the time of their compensation examinations. All participants completed the Disability Beliefs Scale and other baseline assessments. Multilevel models assessed change in treatment use as a function of time relative to the C&P exam, compensation examination status (before or after), and the interaction between examination status and beliefs about treatment benefits.<h4>Results</h4>No main effects of time or examination status were observed. As hypothesized, beliefs about treatment benefits moderated the effect of examination status on PTSD treatment use. Veterans believing more strongly that mental health treatment would help a claim differentially attended PTSD treatment before the examination than after. The effect was not observed for general mental health treatment use.<h4>Conclusion</h4>The association between Veterans' use of PTSD treatment and their service-connection examination status was moderated by beliefs that receiving treatment affects the service-connection decision. This suggests that factors reported to motivate seeking service-connection-finances, validation of Veterans' experiences, and the involvement of significant others-might also help motivate Veterans' use of effective PTSD treatments. However, the results reflect correlations that could be explained in other ways, and service-connection was one of many factors impacting PTSD treatment engagement.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209488
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