Rural veterans face higher mental health barriers than urban veterans

· News-Medical

An analysis published in The Journal of Rural Health found that among US Veterans with serious mental illness (SMI), rural Veterans were somewhat more likely to have co-occurring mental health conditions than urban Veterans but were less likely to receive SMI care.

Among 387,477 Veterans with SMI receiving care through the Veterans Health Administration in 2018–2022, 28% were rural. Compared with urban Veterans, rural Veterans were more likely to have mental health comorbidities including anxiety and posttraumatic stress disorder. Rural Veterans had a 38% lower odds of receiving SMI care, a 15% lower odds of having a video-to-home telehealth mental health visit, a 13% lower odds of having an outpatient mental health visit, and a 10% lower odds of receiving multidisciplinary care. Importantly, these rural-urban differences remained after accounting for key demographic and clinical characteristics.

Older age, white race, non-Hispanic or Latino ethnicity, being male, being widowed, and not having service connection were associated with a lower likelihood of later receiving mental health care.

Source:

Wiley

Journal reference: