From the Secretary of Veterans Affairs Robert Wilkie, to all of
our Veterans and supporters across the country, a note explaining the Mission
Act.
Imagine if Republicans and
Democrats worked together to pass reforms that improve the lives of
millions of people.
And imagine if those reforms
put America’s Veterans at the center of their healthcare decisions, leading
to better customer service for our Nation’s heroes.
This isn’t hypothetical. It
happened last year when Congress passed the MISSION Act.
Through state-of-the-art
facilities, cutting-edge technology, and increased clinician recruiting and
retention incentives, VA continues to enhance its coordinated care system
through high-quality VA health care and community care provider networks.
The legislation sailed through
Congress with overwhelming bipartisan support and the strong backing of
Veterans’ service organizations.
President Donald J. Trump’s
signature put us on a path to implementing these reforms. On June 6, the
MISSION Act will enable VA to consolidate the Department’s community care
efforts into a single, simple-to-use program that will empower Veterans
with the ability to choose the healthcare providers they trust.
So what can Veterans expect on
June 6?
Less red tape, more
satisfaction and predictability for patients, more efficiency for our
clinicians, and better value for taxpayers.
Veterans will be eligible to
get community care for a variety of reasons, including when VA can’t
provide the treatment they need or when care outside our system is in the
best medical interest of the patient.
We listened to Veterans and
heard they preferred standards based on drive times rather than driving
mileage because those standards better reflect Veteran experiences,
especially in large urban areas with lots of traffic.
To ensure our Veterans are
spending their time getting care instead of driving to it, patients facing
an average drive time of 30-minutes or more for VA primary or mental
healthcare, or non-institutional extended care services, will have the
option of choosing a community provider closer to home. For specialty care,
the drive-time standard will be an average of 60 minutes.
And to get Veterans the care
they need when they need it, VA patients facing a 20-day or more wait time
for primary or mental healthcare, or non-institutional extended care
services, will have the option of choosing a community provider who can
deliver that care faster. For specialty care, the wait-time standard will
be 28 days.
For additional convenience and
timely treatment, eligible Veterans will also have access to urgent,
walk-in care that gives them the choice to receive certain services at
participating community clinics in their communities. (To access this new
benefit, Veterans will select a provider in VA’s community care network and
may be charged a copayment.)
Veterans will be encouraged to
ask VA about these new options, and well-trained staff will be available to
help them quickly understand their choices.
These exciting and important
changes speak to my top priority – delivering the best medical customer
service and offering Veterans more healthcare choices.
While we still have more work
to do, the VA is making progress.
And Veterans have noticed.
Patients’ trust in VA care has
skyrocketed to 87.7 percent, and in the last fiscal year VA completed more
than 58 million internal appointments – a record high and 623,000 more than
the year before.
VA employees are noticing improvements
as well. VA ranked sixth out of 17 Federal Government agencies
in the Partnership for Public Service’s most recent “Best Places to Work”
survey, up from 17th the year prior.
To maintain the trust of our
Veterans, we must continue to deliver. And we will constantly innovate,
upgrade, and pursue ways to better serve our Nation’s heroes.
The MISSION Act is a vital part
of this effort, giving VA the ability to implement the best practices we’ve
learned in our nearly 75 years of experience offering community care.
The core of the doctor-patient
relationship is trust. President Trump promised Veterans that this core
value would shape the VA.
With the MISSION Act, the
future of the VA healthcare system will lie in the hands of Veterans –
precisely where it should be.
That’s exactly what President
Trump promised, it’s exactly what Congress voted for, and it’s exactly what
VA will deliver to America’s Veterans.
We will provide more information
and progress updates over the next several weeks.
For
more information on the Mission Act, and what this will do for all
Veterans, please go to www.MISSIONAct.va.gov
Your
support and health are our mission. Thank you for choosing VA.
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