Women Veterans Task Force Draft Plan Released
June 2012
The
Department of Veterans Affairs is releasing for public comment
a draft of its strategic report to address key issues facing
women Veterans. The plan outlines steps for improvements to
care and services for women Veterans that are sustainable,
accountable and a part of the department’s culture and
operations.
“Expanding
care and services to women Veterans is too important to limit
ourselves solely to the views within the department, so we
are seeking feedback from all stakeholders, most importantly
women Veterans themselves,” said Secretary of Veterans
Affairs Eric K. Shinseki. “The VA must be visionary
and agile enough to anticipate and adjust not only to the
coming increase in women Veterans, but also to the complexity
and longevity of treatment needs.”
Shinseki
formed a task force to develop an action plan to address women
Veterans’ issues. Since then, the group has conducted
a broad survey of department experts to identify those issues
and organize them by priority. The draft report is an interim
step prior to VA finalizing its overall plan.
The
report comes at an important juncture in VA’s history
that demands a review of the quality, quantity, and types
of services and programs it provides to women Veterans. The
number of women Veterans using VA has increased 83 percent
in the past decade, from about 160,000 to over 292,000 between
fiscal years 2000 and 2009, compared with a 50 percent increase
in men.
Women
are now the fastest growing cohort within the Veteran community.
In 2011, about 1.8 million or 8 percent of the 22.2 million
Veterans were women. The male Veteran population is projected
to decrease from 20.2 million men in 2010 to 16.7 million
by 2020. In contrast, the number of women Veterans will increase
from 1.8 million in 2011 to 2 million in 2020, at which time
women will make up 10.7 percent of the total Veteran population.
VA
is training providers in basic and advanced topics in women’s
health through mini-residencies, and over 1200 providers have
currently received training. Comprehensive women’s health
care can be provided within three different models of care,
including comprehensive women’s clinics; separate, but
shared, space women’s clinics; or integrated primary
care clinics. All of these clinic models ensure that women
receive all of their primary health care (prevention, medical,
and routine gynecologic care) by a single primary care provider.
A network of medical directors and program managers who coordinate
care for women Veterans now encompasses all 153 medical centers
in the VA Health Care System.
The
public notice and instructions for how to submit comments
will be posted at www.regulations.gov.
The draft written report will be open for comment for 30 days,
and responders will have a number of options to provide both
electronic and written feedback. Readers will also be able
to participate in a public discussion board on the Internet
at: http://vawomenvetstratplan.uservoice.com/forums/159415-general.
To
view the report without making recommendations, please visit
VA’s website at: http://www.va.gov/opa/publications/Draft_2012_Women-Veterans_StrategicPlan.pdf.
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