Very Important Paper on Proposed Privatization of the VHA
Proposed Veterans Choice Card Program Expansion
Briefing Sheet
from the Association of VA P
sychologist Leaders, Association of
VA Social
Workers, American Psychological
Association and National Associ
ation of Social
Workers
October 22, 2015
Background
Many veterans wait unacceptably long times for appointments in
the Veterans Health
Administration (VHA). The Veterans Access, Choice, Accountabili
ty and Transparency
Act of 2014 Choice Card Program was enacted as a three-year sol
ution to address
access problems for selected veterans. One year into that pilot
, there are concerted
Congressional efforts to expand the Choice Program, and make it
permanent.
There are no additional appropriations in the Choice Card Progr
am expansion bills;
funding for expanding the Choice Card Program would come by sip
honing allocations
from VHA Medical Centers & Community Based Outpatient Clinics –
– downsizing the
number of VHA providers and programs. The effect over time woul
d be to dismantle the
VHA system and privatize care for veterans.
The proposed expansion of Choice is predicated on popular myths
, which are critiqued
below.
Myths about VHA Health Care and Choice Program Expansion
Myth:
Quality of VHA healthcare is worse than in other healthcare systems.
In fact:
Independent evaluations have repeatedly found that VHA outpati
ent care
outperforms non-VHA commercial, Medicare, and Medicaid HMO outp
atient care
on virtually every single measure of quality. VHA hospitals per
form as good or
better than non-VHA hospitals on most, but not all, inpatient q
uality measures.
i
ii
iii
Myth:
Veterans with mental health problems are getting inadequate VHA care.
In fact: The
2011 RAND evaluation reported that t
he quality of VHA mental health
care “is as good as or better than that reported for patients w
ith comparable
diagnoses who received care through private insurers, Medicare,
or Medicaid.”
iv
Myth:
Delayed access in the VHA is systemic.
In fact:
Although excessive appointment delays exist in specific locatio
ns, the
recent MITRE/RAND assessment found
no system-wide crisis in acc
ess to VHA
care.
v
Timeliness for mental/behavioral healthcare in VHA is as good
or better
than in commercial and public plans.
vi
Myth:
The VHA is doing an inferior job addressing veteran suicides.
In fact:
In a recent national study of suicides between 2000 and 2010, v
eterans
who used VHA services had
reduced
rates of suicide, while veterans not utilizing
VHA had increased rates.
vii
Since its launch eight years ago, the 24-hour
Veterans Crisis Line has answered more than 1.86 million calls
from veterans and
their family/friends; care coordination for callers is easier i
n cases when a
veteran’s provider is in the VHA than in the community.
Myth:
Expanding Choice will provide veterans with new options without taking away
existing ones.
In fact:
Although the 2014 Choice legislation continued the current lev
el of VHA
funding and tacked on extra allocations for three years of Choi
ce, the new
legislative efforts would pay fo
r Choice Program expansion out
of VHA funds. This
will incrementally downsize t
he number of VHA providers and pro
grams.
Myth:
Expanding Choice won’t harm healthcare education.
In fact:
70% of all physicians (as well as 40 other healthcare professi
ons) receive
part of their clinical training in VHA.
viii
Significant reductions in the number of VHA
attending supervisors would disrupt healthcare education.
Myth:
VA healthcare is disjointed and unwieldy.
In fact
: Unlike fractured community treatment, VHA healthcare integrat
es
concurrent physical, mental, behavioral and psychosocial proble
ms, including
homelessness and unemployment. Since 2012, 175,000 homeless vet
erans have
been housed; 14,000 veterans participate yearly in VA Compensat
ed Work
Therapy programs.
Myth:
A substantial number of veterans with mental health problems avoid VHA
treatment because they feel stigmatized receiving services at VHAs.
In fact:
Veterans benefit from the camaraderie of fellow veterans. Ther
e is no
research that’s found veterans feel greater stigma receiving me
ntal health care at
VHAs.
Recommendations
The VHA must fix its access problem. The best means to do so ar
e:
1. Increase funding to VA medical centers and community based o
utpatient clinics
where staff/patient ratios are inadequate to provide timely acc
ess.
2. Expand telehealth and telemental health services for rural a
nd homebound
veterans.
3. Implement emerging VHA best practice access procedures.
4. Oppose Choice Card Program Expansion legislation that siphon
s VHA funds into
privatized care.
As 8 leading veterans service organizations stated September 16
, 2015 in a joint Open
Letter about privatizing VHA care:
“Eliminating the VA health care system – considering all that i
t has done in the
past and all that it could be in the future – would inevitably
endanger the health
and well-being of millions of wounded, injured and ill veterans
, an outcome that
we cannot allow to occur… Giving veterans health savings accoun
ts in lieu of
access to a VA health care system would effectively diminish ou
r nation’s sacred
obligation to ‘care for him who shall have borne the battle…’ ”
ix
i
http://www.va.gov/opa/choiceac
t/documents/assessments/Assessmen
t_B_Health_Care_Capabilities.pdf
Proposed Veterans Choice Card Program Expansion
Briefing Sheet
from the Association of VA P
sychologist Leaders, Association of
VA Social
Workers, American Psychological
Association and National Associ
ation of Social
Workers
October 22, 2015
Background
Many veterans wait unacceptably long times for appointments in
the Veterans Health
Administration (VHA). The Veterans Access, Choice, Accountabili
ty and Transparency
Act of 2014 Choice Card Program was enacted as a three-year sol
ution to address
access problems for selected veterans. One year into that pilot
, there are concerted
Congressional efforts to expand the Choice Program, and make it
permanent.
There are no additional appropriations in the Choice Card Progr
am expansion bills;
funding for expanding the Choice Card Program would come by sip
honing allocations
from VHA Medical Centers & Community Based Outpatient Clinics –
– downsizing the
number of VHA providers and programs. The effect over time woul
d be to dismantle the
VHA system and privatize care for veterans.
The proposed expansion of Choice is predicated on popular myths
, which are critiqued
below.
Myths about VHA Health Care and Choice Program Expansion
Myth:
Quality of VHA healthcare is worse than in other healthcare systems.
In fact:
Independent evaluations have repeatedly found that VHA outpati
ent care
outperforms non-VHA commercial, Medicare, and Medicaid HMO outp
atient care
on virtually every single measure of quality. VHA hospitals per
form as good or
better than non-VHA hospitals on most, but not all, inpatient q
uality measures.
i
ii
iii
Myth:
Veterans with mental health problems are getting inadequate VHA care.
In fact: The
2011 RAND evaluation reported that t
he quality of VHA mental health
care “is as good as or better than that reported for patients w
ith comparable
diagnoses who received care through private insurers, Medicare,
or Medicaid.”
iv
Myth:
Delayed access in the VHA is systemic.
In fact:
Although excessive appointment delays exist in specific locatio
ns, the
recent MITRE/RAND assessment found
no system-wide crisis in acc
ess to VHA
care.
v
Timeliness for mental/behavioral healthcare in VHA is as good
or better
than in commercial and public plans.
vi
Myth:
The VHA is doing an inferior job addressing veteran suicides.
In fact:
In a recent national study of suicides between 2000 and 2010, v
eterans
who used VHA services had
reduced
rates of suicide, while veterans not utilizing
VHA had increased rates.
vii
Since its launch eight years ago, the 24-hour
Veterans Crisis Line has answered more than 1.86 million calls
from veterans and
their family/friends; care coordination for callers is easier i
n cases when a
veteran’s provider is in the VHA than in the community.
Myth:
Expanding Choice will provide veterans with new options without taking away
existing ones.
In fact:
Although the 2014 Choice legislation continued the current lev
el of VHA
funding and tacked on extra allocations for three years of Choi
ce, the new
legislative efforts would pay fo
r Choice Program expansion out
of VHA funds. This
will incrementally downsize t
he number of VHA providers and pro
grams.
Myth:
Expanding Choice won’t harm healthcare education.
In fact:
70% of all physicians (as well as 40 other healthcare professi
ons) receive
part of their clinical training in VHA.
viii
Significant reductions in the number of VHA
attending supervisors would disrupt healthcare education.
Myth:
VA healthcare is disjointed and unwieldy.
In fact
: Unlike fractured community treatment, VHA healthcare integrat
es
concurrent physical, mental, behavioral and psychosocial proble
ms, including
homelessness and unemployment. Since 2012, 175,000 homeless vet
erans have
been housed; 14,000 veterans participate yearly in VA Compensat
ed Work
Therapy programs.
Myth:
A substantial number of veterans with mental health problems avoid VHA
treatment because they feel stigmatized receiving services at VHAs.
In fact:
Veterans benefit from the camaraderie of fellow veterans. Ther
e is no
research that’s found veterans feel greater stigma receiving me
ntal health care at
VHAs.
Recommendations
The VHA must fix its access problem. The best means to do so ar
e:
1. Increase funding to VA medical centers and community based o
utpatient clinics
where staff/patient ratios are inadequate to provide timely acc
ess.
2. Expand telehealth and telemental health services for rural a
nd homebound
veterans.
3. Implement emerging VHA best practice access procedures.
4. Oppose Choice Card Program Expansion legislation that siphon
s VHA funds into
privatized care.
As 8 leading veterans service organizations stated September 16
, 2015 in a joint Open
Letter about privatizing VHA care:
“Eliminating the VA health care system – considering all that i
t has done in the
past and all that it could be in the future – would inevitably
endanger the health
and well-being of millions of wounded, injured and ill veterans
, an outcome that
we cannot allow to occur… Giving veterans health savings accoun
ts in lieu of
access to a VA health care system would effectively diminish ou
r nation’s sacred
obligation to ‘care for him who shall have borne the battle…’ ”
ix
i
http://www.va.gov/opa/choiceac
t/documents/assessments/Assessmen
t_B_Health_Care_Capabilities.pdf