Policies, Problems, and Planning to Reach Rural Veterans
Suicide accounts for 8.3% of adult deaths in the United States, with Veterans alone accounting for an unfathomable 14.3% of these tragedies (Department of Veterans Affairs [VA], 2018). As a result, the veteran patient population has 1.5 times the rate of suicide as non-veterans (VA, 2018). Our current and previous presidential administrations have helped to fund and develop veteran suicide research and interventions. Since the passage of the Veterans Access, Choice, and Accountability Act (CHOICE Act) in 2014, data and research on veteran suicide have allowed policymakers to focus on reaching veterans living in rural areas. Rural veterans account for nearly one-fourth of the veteran population (VA,2018). Veterans who live in rural areas have a 20%-22% higher risk of suicide.
In 2014, President Barrack Obama and Senator John McCain III set the groundwork for veteran mental health care reform with the passage of the Veterans Access, Choice and Accountability Act (CHOICE Act) of 2014. With this act, veterans in rural areas had expanded options to receive care from non-VA providers with the VHA’s coordination and approval. The CHOICE Act also highlighted health care staffing disparities via staff shortage reports required by the VA Office of Inspector General, and the identification of the need to increase Graduate Medical Education (GME) residency positions in the mental health specialty.
A new piece of legislation, the Jeff Miller and Richard Blumentha Veterans Health Care and Benefits Improvement Act, was passed in 2016, which increased the number of GME residency seats from five to ten while also extending the program through 2024, as originally intended (Albanese et al., 2019). Despite the expansion of GME residency positions and budget extensions, rural health care inequities continued to worsen. There is a physician shortage gap in rural areas, which is a mission-critical priority for the Veterans Health Administration (VHA). Advocates and policymakers started working towards the John S McCain III (Daniel K Akaka) VA Maintaining Internal System and Strengthening Integrated Outside Networks Act of 2018 (MISSION).
The population health topic I am choosing is the opioid epidemic. I chose this because it affects such a large population in today’s world. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2022), drug overdose deaths have increased by nearly 5% from 2018 to 2019 and quadrupled since 1999. Over 70% of the 70,630 deaths in 2019 involved an opioid. In 2020, 91,799 drug overdose deaths occurred in the United States. The number continues to rise, and drugs seem to be more accessible.
Regarding social determinants, people from low socio-economic classes have poorer health. They are more likely to use tobacco, drink alcohol at high risk, and use illicit drugs. Drug-dependent people are particularly likely to be unemployed and to experience marginalization, both of which can exacerbate their problems and prevent seeking or benefiting from treatment (Spooner,2017). Drug abuse is not shy when it comes to whom it affects. People in low socioeconomic classes happen to get slammed with drug abuse as we have not provided the right accessibility for them.
One of President Trump’s solutions was to build a wall. Theoretically, the wall would stop illegal drugs from coming in, and this wall was supposed to be built on the Mexican border. He also said he would enhance access to addiction services, end Medicaid policies that obstruct inpatient treatment, and expand incentives for state and local governments to use drug courts and mandated treatment to respond to the addiction crisis (Kaiser Family Foundation,2017). Although some think the wall may help, it is not the solution to the epidemic. In some cases, working from the outside inward works, but in this case, I think this epidemic needs to be approached from the inside out.
In this case, I would have started the solution on the inside. I would have targeted what we can control right now. Stopping Illegal drugs from coming in will help in the long run, but you must focus on what illegal drugs are happening in the US. Building a wall doesn’t stop the use, trading, selling, or buying we are currently dealing with. I would work to eliminate those issues, do more research on who this affects the most, and start there. We know people from low socio-economic classes struggle the most, so I start there and work my way out. Maybe we start focusing on getting these people out of this low-income rut. We provide schooling, daycare, and opportunities some people will never receive. Even starting there seems small, but I would further it with Trump’s plan to enhance access to drug addiction services like counselors. I would hold more doctors accountable and pharmaceutical companies pushing these opioids for money.
According to the Democrat National Committee (2020), President Biden’s solution includes holding people accountable such as big pharmaceutical companies, executives, and others, responsible for their role in triggering the opioid crisis. Biden will create effective prevention, treatment, and recovery services available to all through a $125 billion federal investment. Most importantly, we will stop overprescribing pain medication to citizens. I think Biden’s solutions to this epidemic were much better; these solutions start inward and target the people in the US struggling. I believe the solutions listed will help the country see a decline in opioid deaths, but they won’t solve the issue altogether.
As much as I agree with this approach, I don’t think the primary producers of these drugs are being held accountable enough. I would figure out a way other than fines to serve these companies. Possibly suspending their production may be a helping solution. The problem is these companies are laced with money, so half the time, they don’t even blink at the request to hand over money due to fines. I wouldn’t change much to Biden’s policy otherwise. I think his approach gives people accessibility, and that’s truly what we need to end this epidemic.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2022). Death Rate Maps & Graphs. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Retrieved August 30, 2022, from https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/deaths/index.html
Democrat National Committee. (2020). The Biden plan to end the opioid crisis. Joe Biden for President: Official Campaign Website. Retrieved August 30, 2022, from https://joebiden.com/opioidcrisis/
Kaiser Family Foundation. (2017, January 9). President-elect Donald Trump stands on six health care issues – election 2016: The issues. KFF. Retrieved August 30, 2022, from https://www.kff.org/report-section/where-president-elect-donald-trump-stands-on-six-health-care-issues/#opioid
Spooner, C. (2017). SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF DRUG USE. National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre (NDARC). Retrieved August 30, 2022, from https://ndarc.med.unsw.edu.au/
In June 2018, the Obama administration laid the framework for the Trump Administration’s MISSION Act, paving the path for it to become a reality. Mission Act actions based on physician shortages now influence GME residency locations, specialties, and the number of positions available within stated constraints. The focus has switched from bringing veterans to health care providers (HCP) to bringing health care providers to veterans. In addition, these measures include expanding the VA Health Care Profession Scholarships (HPSP) to graduate studies for nurse practitioners who are allowed to practice without physician supervision. Expansions such as these will alleviate staffing shortages in remote veteran communities while also improving patient access to high-quality health care (American Association of Colleges of Nursing [AACN], 2016). Non-VA facilities can now help vets in need without fear of repercussion thanks to GME changes.
The Sgt. Ketchum Rural Veterans Mental Health Act of 2021 was recently passed by the Biden Administration. Many sailors, marines, and soldiers have lost their lives due to a lack of access to treatment for suicide thoughts, so this law is dedicated to Sergent Brandon Ketchum. Military veteran Sgt. Ketchum had post traumatic stress disorder and substance misuse issues when he returned home to rural Iowa after serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. At the Iowa City VA Hospital in 2016, he requested to be admitted, but the psychiatrist ruled that inpatient care was not required at the time. Brandon went back to his house and died that night by suicide. Although no health care professionals were determined to be directly responsible for his death, quality patient education on suicidal ideation, risk factor ratings and access to routine outpatient psychiatric mental health services or the lack of these could be to blame. RANGE (Rural Access Network for Growth Enhancement) programs will be available to rural veterans who have been diagnosed with schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar affective disorder, major depression, PTSD, or any other severe or persistent mental health illness (Veterans Health Administration, VA.gov: Veterans Affairs 2013). Veterans with major mental illness who are homeless or at danger of homelessness can receive intense case management through the RANGE program, which focuses on recovery. Rural veterans who require more rigorous mental health treatment than typical outpatient therapy are entitled to a study and report under the Sgt. Ketchum Rural Veterans Mental Health Act of 2021, which mandates that the government do so (Monteith et al., 2020).
Although on a smaller scale, VA healthcare reform faces similar obstacles to achieving universal coverage. There are a number of factors that contribute to the creation of policies that appear to be insurmountable obstacles to healthcare reform. However, change is a process. The Sgt. Ketchum Rural Veterans Mental Health Act of 2021, which will replace the CHOICE Act, is a hopeful step forward. Policymakers will use the findings from this ongoing amount of data and study on veteran health. We owe those who have given their lives to defend us an extra layer of protection with each new bill and amendment that is passed.
Discussion: Presidential Agendas NURS 6050 References
Albanese, A. P., Bope, E. T., Sanders, K. M., & Bowman, M. (2019). The VA mission act of 2018: A potential game changer for rural GME expansion and Veteran health care. The Journal of Rural Health, 36(1), 133–136. https://doi.org/10.1111/jrh.12360
American Association of Colleges of Nursing. (2016, December 13). VA ruling on APRN practice: a breakthrough for veterans health care. Message posted on the American Association of Colleges of Nursing Listserv:web@aacn.nche.edu
Department of Veterans Affairs (2018b). VA National Suicide Data Report: 2005–2015. Retrieved from
https://www.mentalhealth.va.gov/ docs/data-sheets/OMHSP_National_Suicide_Da ta_Report_2005-2015_06-14-18_508-compliant.pdf
Monteith, L. L., Wendleton, L., Bahraini, N. H., Matarazzo, B. B., Brimner, G., & Mohatt, N. V. (2020). Together with veterans: Va national strategy alignment and lessons learned from community‐based suicide prevention for rural veterans. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 50(3), 588–600. https://doi.org/10.1111/sltb.12613
VA.gov: Veterans Affairs. RURAL VETERANS. (2016, January 19).
https://www.ruralhealth.va.gov/aboutus/ruralvets.asp.
Veterans Health Administration, D. U. S. for O. and M. (2013, May 8). VA.gov: Veterans Affairs. Enhanced RANGE Program. https://www.lexington.va.gov/services/Enhanced_RANGE_Program.asp.