Clinical Resource Hubs ensure Veterans receive medical and specialty care with telehealth and other technologies.
VA sets the stage for continued health care innovations, bringing high-quality care to Veterans near and far.
Seeing 50% of physicians leave Puerto Rico, the Caribbean VA established VA-sponsored accredited graduate medical education residency programs.
Clinical Resource Hubs combine in-person care and telehealth to support underserved medical facilities.
VA has a variety of resources to meet your mental health needs at any point, before or during a crisis.
Updated Access to Care website provides Veterans improved wait time information, making it easier for them to plan their health care visits.
VA’s Access to Care site supports our commitment to transparency. The data has helped to combat myths around COVID-19 vaccinations.
Improved access to care results in better health for millions of America’s Veterans and a better working environment for VA employees across the U.S.
VHA's Office of Veterans Access to Care (OVAC) met with healthcare experts from Kaiser Permanente, National Quality Forum, New York Health & Hospitals, Press Ganey, Walmart, CVS, Microsoft, and other organizations and academic institutions. The roundtable discussed the need for national ‘access to care’ definitions and standards to be used across the U.S. healthcare industry.
VA recently teamed up with Philips, VFW, and the American Legion to provide equipment for remote telehealth exam rooms. The project, dubbed “Atlas”, will enable Veterans to conduct virtual appointments with VA care teams and specialists.
The Increasing Access to Pharmacy Care Through Clinical Pharmacy Specialists program aims to better unify and direct the use of clinical pharmacists so Veterans get better access to their care.
Telehealth technology ensures Veteran patients receive the right care at the right time and often in the comfort of their own home.












