%0 Journal Article %T Post-9/11 veterans perceptions of the pandemic: Areas of greatest impact on health and well-being. %A Kalvesmaki AF %A Gonzales E %A George RT %A Nguyen H %A Pugh MJ %J PEC Innov %V 1 %N 0 %D Dec 2022 %M 36348640 暂无%R 10.1016/j.pecinn.2022.100096 %X UNASSIGNED: Assess potential impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on a subset of Post-9/11 U.S. Veterans included in a study of post-traumatic epilepsy (PTE).
UNASSIGNED: Two measures were added to a structured health interview for Veterans during temporary pandemic research shutdown: a validated health questionnaire [1] previously completed by survey, and a semi-structured instrument developed to assess whether pandemic conditions affected responses to the health questionnaire and identify unique impacts. Interviews were conducted between August 2020 - February 2021. Scaled items were calculated and t-tests used to compare results. Open-ended items were coded using thematic analyses.
UNASSIGNED: Veterans identified eight major areas of impact with negative and positive impacts: mental health, family, social, work/employment, access to resources, physical health, finances, and education.
UNASSIGNED: The temporary shut-down of a large health study for Post-9/11 Veterans provided an opportunity to devise an instrument to assess COVID-19's impact on health and well-being. The instrument was accepted as of the first Veteran instrument in a pandemic SDOH research repository [2], and is being used in other studies.
UNASSIGNED: This study highlights the need to assess and understand interrelated relationships of factors impacting health and well-being, especially as COVID-19 moves from pandemic to endemic with reverberating effects across multiple social determinants of health (SDOH).