VA Commits To Women Vets Health

American Legion Convention: VA Commits To Women Vets Health

When speaking to the American Legion Convention, Dr. Sally Haskell of the VA recommitted to mitigating gender disparities within the existing health system for women veterans. Under the current system, male veterans have consistently better outcomes than female veterans. The women’s health initiative is already seeing some good results and shows marked improvements in screening cervical and breast cancer.

From the American Legion:

The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has launched a Women Veterans Health Transformation Initiative that has already produced marked improvements in health-care quality for women veterans, according to Dr. Sally Haskell, M.D., who directs VA’s women’s health services.

Haskell spoke about the initiative during The American Legion’s Women Veterans Panel on Aug. 25 in Indianapolis. Joining her on the panel were Roxanne Rusch, R.N., of the Veterans Health Administration and Norma Gray Jones, Ph.D., a military social worker and clinical associate professor at Fort Sam Houston, Texas.

Women now make up 15 percent of active-duty forces and 18 percent of reserve and National Guard components. As of 2011, 337,000 women veterans are enrolled in VA, including 55 percent of women who served in Iraq or Afghanistan.

“As we’ve heard, the VA wasn’t really prepared for the rapid growth of the female veteran population, and we’ve had to make some rapid changes,” Haskell said. “We really want to transform the health-care delivery for women veterans, and increase the understanding of the effects of military service on women veterans’ lives.”

VA has taken a close look at gender disparities in its system, Haskell said. “It turns out, not only in the VA but also in the private sector, there are gender disparities in care. If you compare men to women across all different types of health-care systems, men (do) slightly better.”

(Featured Image Credit: AmericanLegion.org)

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