© 2024 Texas Public Radio
Real. Reliable. Texas Public Radio.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

VA Secretary Talks Plans To Make Care More Efficient

jimtimimages
/
flickr

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is working to make health care more efficient and accessible. The  MISSION Act, which went into effect last month, allows those enrolled in the VA health care system to visit approved "community care providers."

Secretary of Veterans Affairs Robert Wilkie says the initiative will help modernize the VA healthcare system.

"If we can not provide that veteran a service within our facility, then we give that veteran the opportunity of getting that service outside of our department," Wilkie says. "And I think that is a very, very important step forward in making sure that the veterans' health is at the center of what we do."

The act also expands access to urgent care for enrolled veterans. Wilkie says the VA has long worked with the private sector, and the department will evaluate these community care providers to ensure their care is up to VA standards.

When it comes to addressing mental health needs, Wilkie says reducing the rate of veteran suicides nationwide is a top priority.

"We now have a presidential task force on suicide prevention of which I am the lead," he says. "We have to have a national conversation about mental health, homelessness and addiction."

Wilkie says if the department can improve veterans' mental health care, it could serve as a model for other groups.

"We are the most visible population when it comes to addressing this issue," Wilkie says. "It is a population that every American understands at some level, and if we can get it right for us, then I think we can benefit the entire country." 

Copyright 2020 KERA. To see more, visit KERA.

Syeda Hasan is KUT's development and affordability reporter. She previously worked as a reporter at Houston Public Media covering county government, immigrant and refugee communities, homelessness and the Sandra Bland case. Her work has been heard nationally on public radio shows such as Morning Edition, All Things Considered and Marketplace.
Syeda Hasan
Syeda Hasan covers mental health for KERA News. A Houston native, her journalism career has taken her to public radio newsrooms around Texas.