# Comparison of Primary Care Experiences and Outpatient Health Service Utilization Among Black and Latino Homeless-Experienced Veterans: An Analysis of Patient-Centered Medical Homes

**Authors:** Melissa Chinchilla, Audrey L. Jones, Aerin DeRussy, Michael F. Green, Lillian Gelberg, Alexander S. Young, Jack Tsai, Sonya E. Gabrielian, Stefan G. Kertesz

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/21501319251382520 · Journal of Primary Care & Community Health · 2025-11-09

## TL;DR

The study found that homeless-experienced Veterans rated homeless-tailored clinics higher than mainstream ones, with minimal racial differences in care ratings.

## Contribution

This is the largest survey to date comparing care experiences of Black, White, and Latino homeless Veterans in VA clinics.

## Key findings

- Homeless-tailored clinics (HPACTs) received higher care ratings than mainstream clinics (PACTs).
- Better Access/Coordination ratings were linked to increased primary and mental health outpatient visits.
- Black Veterans rated team Cooperation and Access/Coordination modestly better than White Veterans.

## Abstract

To examine whether, among persons with recent homeless experience, minoritized clients rate primary care differently from non-minoritized clients in Veterans Affairs (VA) mainstream and homeless tailored clinics, through the largest survey of homeless-experienced Black, White, and Latino Veterans to date.

Surveys were collected from HEVs in Homeless-tailored Patient-Aligned Care Teams (HPACTs) and mainstream Patient Aligned Care Teams (PACTs; n = 4894). We tested multivariable associations between race/ethnicity, clinic (HPACT vs mainstream-PACT), and their interaction, on care experience ratings and service utilization.

There were no major differences in care ratings by race/ethnicity; medical and social vulnerability factors were associated with worse ratings. Black HEVs rated team Cooperation and Access/Coordination modestly better compared to White HEVs, while being Latino was nonsignificant. HPACTs were rated higher than mainstream-PACTs. Better Access/Coordination ratings were associated with more primary care (+1.12 additional visits per point increase) and mental health outpatient visits (+4.37 additional visits per point increase).

In VA primary care, homeless-tailored clinics outperformed mainstream ones while racial/ethnic differences in ratings were minor. Optimizing perceived Access/Coordination of services may offer a path to increased service use.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12602919/full.md

## References

34 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12602919/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12602919