VA ensures Veterans have
same-day access to emergency mental health care
WASHINGTON — As part of the
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs’ (VA) efforts to provide the best mental
health care access possible, VA is reminding Veterans that it offers all
Veterans same-day access to emergency mental health care at any VA health care
facility across the country.
“Providing same-day 24/7 access to mental
health crisis intervention and support for Veterans, service members and their
families is our top clinical priority,” said VA Secretary Robert Wilkie. “It’s
important that all Veterans, their family and friends know that help is easily
available.”
VA’s Office of Mental Health
and Suicide Prevention is the national leader in making high-quality mental
health care and suicide prevention resources available to Veterans through a
full spectrum of outpatient, inpatient and telemental health services.
Additionally, VA has developed
the National Strategy for Preventing Veteran Suicide, which reflects the
department’s vision for a coordinated effort to prevent suicide among all
service members and Veterans. This strategy maintains VA’s focus on high-risk
individuals in health care settings, while also adopting a broad public health
approach to suicide prevention.
VA has supported numerous
Veterans and has the capacity to assist more. In fiscal year (FY) 2018, 1.7
million Veterans received Veterans Health Administration (VHA) mental health
services. These patients received more than 84,000 psychiatric hospital stays,
about 41,700 residential stays and more than 21 million outpatient encounters.
Nationally, in the first
quarter of FY 2019, 90% of new patients completed an appointment in a mental
health clinic within 30 days of scheduling an appointment, and 96.8% of
established patients completed a mental health appointment within 30 days of
the day they requested. For FY 2018, 48% of initial, in-person Primary Care —
Mental Health Integration (PC-MHI) encounters were on the same day as the
patient’s PC encounter. During the first quarter of FY 2019, 51% of initial,
in-person PC-MHI encounters were on the same day as the patient’s PC encounter.
Veterans in crisis – or those
concerned about one – should call the Veterans Crisis Line at 800-273-8255 and
press 1, send a text message to 838255 or chat online at VeteransCrisisLine.net.
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