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VETERANS HEALTH CARE: Services for Substance Use Disorders, and Efforts to Address Access Issues in Rural Areas

GAO-20-35 Published: Dec 02, 2019. Publicly Released: Dec 02, 2019.
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Fast Facts

Veterans coping with the stresses of deployment or with readjusting to civilian life are at particular risk for drug and alcohol addiction. The VA pays for addiction treatment. We looked at these treatment services and veterans’ access to them.

Overall, veterans living in rural areas use VA’s addiction treatment services at the same rate as those in urban areas. But providing treatment services in rural areas poses specific challenges to veterans and non-veterans alike, such as a shortage of specialized providers and lack of transportation. The agency is taking steps to address these challenges in rural areas.

Doctor and patient

Doctor and patient

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Highlights

What GAO Found

The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) treated 518,570 veterans diagnosed with a substance use disorder (SUD) in fiscal year 2018, a 9.5 percent increase since fiscal year 2016. Of these, 152,482 veterans received specialty SUD services in fiscal year 2018, a number that has remained relatively unchanged since fiscal year 2014. Specialty SUD services are those provided through a clinic or program dedicated to SUD treatment. Expenditures for VA's specialty SUD services increased from about $552 million in fiscal year 2014 to more than $600 million in fiscal year 2018. In the same year, VA expended about $80 million to purchase SUD services from non-VA community providers for more than 20,000 veterans, an increase since fiscal year 2014. The number receiving this care from non-VA providers may include veterans who also received services in VA facilities.

 Veterans Treated for Substance Use Disorders, Fiscal Year 2018

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Note: Specialty SUD services are those provided through a clinic or program dedicated to substance use disorder treatment. SUD services include services provided by any type of provider.

VA data show that overall there was little difference in the percentage of veterans using SUD services, including specialty services, in rural and urban areas in fiscal year 2018. However, there were differences for some specific services. For example, in rural areas, 27 percent of veterans with an opioid use disorder received medication-assisted treatment—an approach that combines behavioral therapy and the use of medications—compared to 34 percent in urban areas. In providing SUD services in rural areas, VA faces issues similar to those faced by the general population, including lack of transportation. The agency is taking steps to address these issues, such as using local service organizations to transport veterans for treatment.

Why GAO Did This Study

Substance use and illicit drug use are a growing problem in the United States. SUDs occur when the recurrent use of alcohol or drugs causes significant impairment, such as health problems. The veteran population has been particularly at risk. Veterans are 1.5 times more likely to die from opioid overdose than the general population, according to VA and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data. Furthermore, veterans live in rural areas at a higher rate than the general population, which may affect their ability to access SUD services. VA is the largest integrated health care system in the United States, providing care to about 6.2 million veterans. VA provides SUD services through outpatient, inpatient, and residential care settings and offers various treatment options, including individual and group therapy, medication-assisted treatment, and naloxone kits to reverse overdoses.

Senate Report 115-130 included a provision for GAO to study VA's capabilities to treat veterans with SUDs. This report describes (1) trends in the number of and expenditures for veterans receiving SUD services, including specialty SUD services; and (2) any differences between veterans' use of SUD services in rural and urban areas, and the issues affecting access to those services in rural areas. GAO reviewed VA policies and data from fiscal years 2014 through 2018. GAO also interviewed officials from six VA health care systems, selected for their high percentage of veterans with an opioid use disorder and to achieve variation in geography and locations VA has designated as urban and rural.

VA provided technical comments, which GAO incorporated as appropriate.

For more information, contact Mary Denigan-Macauley at (202) 512-7114 or deniganmacauleym@gao.gov.

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Topics

VeteransHealth careVeterans affairsResidential careGeographyTherapyDisease controlDrugsSubstance abuseHealth care systemsVeterans health care