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Author Affiliations
Mr. Tam is a medical student at the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine. Dr. Yuan is a Clinical Research Fellow, Dr. Mauro is a Professor, and Dr. Arron is an Associate Professor, all in the Department of Dermatology at the University of California San Francisco. Dr. Arron also is the Chief of Mohs Micrographic Surgery and Dr. Mauro is the Interim Deputy Chief of Staff, both at San Francisco Veterans Affairs Health System. Dr. Dellavalle is a Professor in the Department of Dermatology at the University of Colorado Denver and the Chief of the Dermatology Service at the Denver Veteran Affairs Medical Center.
Author Disclosures
The authors report no actual or potential conflicts of interest with regard to this article.
Disclosure
The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Federal Practitioner, Frontline Medical Communications Inc., the U.S. Government, or any of its agencies.
A decade has passed since Karen and colleagues conducted their study on MMS within the VHA.11 Data from this study suggest some progress has been made in improving veterans’ access to MMS. However, VHA sites that provide MMS are still predominantly located in large cities. In cases in which VHA providers refer patients to outside facilities, care coordination and follow-up are challenging. The present findings provide a basis for continuing VHA efforts to optimize resource allocation and improve longitudinal care for veterans who require MMS for skin cancer. Another area of interest is the comparative cost-effectiveness of MMS care provided within the VHA rather than at outside sites through purchased care. The answer may depend on geographic location, as MMS demand may be higher in some regions than that of others. For patients who receive MMS care outside the VHA, efforts should be made to improve communication and follow-up between VHA and external providers.
This study was limited in that it surveyed only those VHA sites with dermatology services or sections. It is possible, though unlikely, that MMS also was provided through nondermatology services. This study’s 70.3% response rate (52/74 dermatology chiefs) matched that of Karen and colleagues.11 Nevertheless, given that 30% of the surveyed chiefs did not respond and that analysis was performed separately for 2 small subgroups, (19 VHA sites that provided on-site MMS and 33 VHA sites that did not), the present findings may not be representative of the VHA as a whole.
Another limitation was that the survey captured respondent estimates of surgical caseloads and resources. Confirmation of these estimates would require a review of internal medical records and workforce analyses, which was beyond the scope of this study.
Although some progress has been made over the past 10 years, access to MMS within the VHA remains limited. About one-third of VHA sites provide on-site MMS; the other two-thirds refer patients with skin cancer to MMS sites outside the VHA. According to their dermatology chiefs, VHA sites that provide MMS have adequate resources and staffing and acceptable wait times for surgery; the challenge is in patients’ long travel distances. At sites that do not provide MMS, patients have access to MMS as well, and acceptable wait times and travel distances; the challenge is in follow-up, especially with activation of the Veterans Choice program. Studies should focus on standardizing veterans’ care and improving their access to MMS.
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