Ensuring women veterans receive veterans’ benefits and services that honor their brave military service is one of the VFW’s top priorities. Currently, women comprise 15 percent of the active-duty military and 18 percent of the Guard and Reserve. With the steady increase of women wearing our nation’s uniform and their increased role in military operations, it has never been more important that we ensure women veterans have a VA that is ready and able to care for them when they transition back to civilian life.
To gauge how well VA is serving women veterans and to identify areas where it needs to improve, the VFW’s women veterans’ advisory team commissioned a survey of women veterans to collect direct feedback from women veterans around the country. After analyzing survey responses and direct feedback from nearly 2,000 women veterans, the VFW has identified multiple recommendations to improve VA health care, outreach, training and homeless programs.
Read the VFW Survey of Women Veterans Summary of Findings here.
The overwhelming majority of women veterans
want VA to expand access to women-specific health care, which includes
hiring more VA health care professionals who are able to identify and
treat their unique health care needs. More specifically, women veterans
want the opportunity to receive their health care from women health care
providers. The VFW has urged Congress and VA to expand its Designated
Women’s Health Primary Care Provider model to mental health clinics and
other health care specialties. This would ensure all women veterans have
access to health care professionals with specialized women’s health
care training. The VFW has also urged VA to allow all women veterans to
choose the gender of their health care provider.
Women veterans who use VA health care for family planning services are
also concerned that VA requires copayments for preventative prescription
drugs, such as contraceptives. This is counter to industry standards
for private health insurance plans, which do not require out-of-pocket
costs for preventative care prescriptions. The VFW has urged Congress to
align VA’s cost share requirements with industry standards.
The VFW was disturbed to hear from survey
respondents that VA employees continue to confuse them for spouses and
caregivers or challenge their veteran status. This is unacceptable and
the VFW has urged VA to properly train its workforce to treat women
veterans with the respect and dignity they have earned.
The VFW also found that older women veterans were less likely to use
their earned benefits and services compared to their younger
counterparts, despite being equally as likely to be eligible or need
such benefits and services. No veteran should be left to wonder what, if
any, benefits she is eligible to receive. The VFW has urged VA to
conduct targeted outreach to older women veterans who may not be aware
of the veterans’ benefits and services VA provides.
Women veterans with children who are
homeless or at risk of becoming homeless face much different barriers
than homeless veterans without children. In fact, homeless and at risk
veterans with children report the lack of childcare services impact
their ability to receive the VA health care and job training services
they need. The VFW has urged Congress and VA to ensure homeless veterans
have access to childcare when receiving health care and job training
services.
Homeless veterans were also concerned with the lack of access to job
training programs and counselors who understand the challenges of being
homeless. The VFW has urged Congress and VA to expand successful
employment and peer-support programs to all homeless veterans to ensure
they are able to obtain meaningful employment and stay off the streets.
The VFW wants to hear from you. If you would like to share your
experience with VA health care or benefits, email the VFW or call 1.800.VFW.1899 (1.800.839.1899).
Do you have questions, comments or need additional information - send us an email!