User login
Repeated and frequent hospitalizations—sometimes referred to as the revolving door phenomenon— are a particular risk for patients during the first month after discharge. Early psychiatric readmission is a standard indicator of adverse outcomes. However, the results
The quality of previous care has long been thought to be a driver of readmission. If that’s the case, a 2025 study suggests that on average veterans received high-quality inpatient psychiatric services at Veterans Health Administration (VHA) facilities across the nation and that may have been key to keeping readmissions down. Analyzing data from 88,954 veterans who received care at VHA Inpatient Mental Health (IMH) services, the researchers found a “relatively low” rate of readmission within 30 days: 7.1% compared with 8% to 31% of other psychiatric patients in the US. With 40,220 unique patients receiving IMH care per year on average between October 2019 and September 2022, a 7.1% readmission rate means > 2800 30-day readmissions annually.
Research has found that veterans who receive care at the VA have better outcomes than those treated in the private sector. Part of that has to do with practitioners who understand the unique needs of their patients. Veterans may have posttraumatic stress disorder or multiple diagnoses, such as depression, panic disorder, and a substance use disorder. Their mental health issues may also coexist with physical health problems, such as traumatic brain injuries due to explosions.
“If you’re trained at the VA, you learn something important about veteran mental health care that you’ll never get if you’re trained someplace else,” Rodney R. Baker, PhD, retired mental health director and chief of psychology for the South Texas VA Health Care System, said recently. Community clinicians may not know how to collect and incorporate information about a patient’s military history, including details about deployments, combat exposure, injuries, military sexual trauma, and unit culture. They may also lack expertise in navigating the transition between military and veteran life, now considered a critical adjustment period.
“This is a unique population,” said Conwell Smith, the American Psychological Association’s deputy chief of military and veteran policy. “Sending veterans out to the community without requiring that mental health care providers understand them is concerning.”
IMH services aim to stabilize mental health crises and improve veterans’ functioning through patient-centered, evidence-based, and recovery-oriented approaches shown to reduce readmission rates. Treatment generally involves a minimum of 4 hours of interdisciplinary, therapeutic programming each day. And upon discharge, the inpatient care team facilitates the patient’s transition to appropriate outpatient services.
Follow-up care, particularly during the first 30 days, has proved critical in reducing readmissions. In studies that have analyzed postdischarge interventions (psychoeducation, mentoring, community-based hospital treatment, use of continuous follow-up and compulsory community treatment), all found fewer hospitalizations when compared to a control group, or a smaller number of admissions after the intervention.
Mental health care for veterans should be provided by experienced practitioners—but those practitioners are leaving VA. According to the VA Office of Inspector General, 57% of medical centers report a shortage of psychologists. And according to the VA’s monthly Workforce Dashboard, the VHA lost 234 psychologists in the first 9 months of 2025. The VA has also announced plans to cut 30,000 jobs by the end of the year and impose caps on staff at every medical center.
“This approach locks in permanent VA understaffing just as demand for mental health services is projected to continue growing through 2030,” said Russell Lemle, PhD, a clinical psychologist and senior policy analyst for the Veterans Healthcare Policy Institute. “The private sector can’t fill this gap either—over a third of Americans live in areas already facing mental health professional shortages. That’s not taking care of our veterans.
“Unless actions are taken quickly to reverse the trend, its mental health services could easily diminish substantially within 10 to 20 years.”
Repeated and frequent hospitalizations—sometimes referred to as the revolving door phenomenon— are a particular risk for patients during the first month after discharge. Early psychiatric readmission is a standard indicator of adverse outcomes. However, the results
The quality of previous care has long been thought to be a driver of readmission. If that’s the case, a 2025 study suggests that on average veterans received high-quality inpatient psychiatric services at Veterans Health Administration (VHA) facilities across the nation and that may have been key to keeping readmissions down. Analyzing data from 88,954 veterans who received care at VHA Inpatient Mental Health (IMH) services, the researchers found a “relatively low” rate of readmission within 30 days: 7.1% compared with 8% to 31% of other psychiatric patients in the US. With 40,220 unique patients receiving IMH care per year on average between October 2019 and September 2022, a 7.1% readmission rate means > 2800 30-day readmissions annually.
Research has found that veterans who receive care at the VA have better outcomes than those treated in the private sector. Part of that has to do with practitioners who understand the unique needs of their patients. Veterans may have posttraumatic stress disorder or multiple diagnoses, such as depression, panic disorder, and a substance use disorder. Their mental health issues may also coexist with physical health problems, such as traumatic brain injuries due to explosions.
“If you’re trained at the VA, you learn something important about veteran mental health care that you’ll never get if you’re trained someplace else,” Rodney R. Baker, PhD, retired mental health director and chief of psychology for the South Texas VA Health Care System, said recently. Community clinicians may not know how to collect and incorporate information about a patient’s military history, including details about deployments, combat exposure, injuries, military sexual trauma, and unit culture. They may also lack expertise in navigating the transition between military and veteran life, now considered a critical adjustment period.
“This is a unique population,” said Conwell Smith, the American Psychological Association’s deputy chief of military and veteran policy. “Sending veterans out to the community without requiring that mental health care providers understand them is concerning.”
IMH services aim to stabilize mental health crises and improve veterans’ functioning through patient-centered, evidence-based, and recovery-oriented approaches shown to reduce readmission rates. Treatment generally involves a minimum of 4 hours of interdisciplinary, therapeutic programming each day. And upon discharge, the inpatient care team facilitates the patient’s transition to appropriate outpatient services.
Follow-up care, particularly during the first 30 days, has proved critical in reducing readmissions. In studies that have analyzed postdischarge interventions (psychoeducation, mentoring, community-based hospital treatment, use of continuous follow-up and compulsory community treatment), all found fewer hospitalizations when compared to a control group, or a smaller number of admissions after the intervention.
Mental health care for veterans should be provided by experienced practitioners—but those practitioners are leaving VA. According to the VA Office of Inspector General, 57% of medical centers report a shortage of psychologists. And according to the VA’s monthly Workforce Dashboard, the VHA lost 234 psychologists in the first 9 months of 2025. The VA has also announced plans to cut 30,000 jobs by the end of the year and impose caps on staff at every medical center.
“This approach locks in permanent VA understaffing just as demand for mental health services is projected to continue growing through 2030,” said Russell Lemle, PhD, a clinical psychologist and senior policy analyst for the Veterans Healthcare Policy Institute. “The private sector can’t fill this gap either—over a third of Americans live in areas already facing mental health professional shortages. That’s not taking care of our veterans.
“Unless actions are taken quickly to reverse the trend, its mental health services could easily diminish substantially within 10 to 20 years.”
Repeated and frequent hospitalizations—sometimes referred to as the revolving door phenomenon— are a particular risk for patients during the first month after discharge. Early psychiatric readmission is a standard indicator of adverse outcomes. However, the results
The quality of previous care has long been thought to be a driver of readmission. If that’s the case, a 2025 study suggests that on average veterans received high-quality inpatient psychiatric services at Veterans Health Administration (VHA) facilities across the nation and that may have been key to keeping readmissions down. Analyzing data from 88,954 veterans who received care at VHA Inpatient Mental Health (IMH) services, the researchers found a “relatively low” rate of readmission within 30 days: 7.1% compared with 8% to 31% of other psychiatric patients in the US. With 40,220 unique patients receiving IMH care per year on average between October 2019 and September 2022, a 7.1% readmission rate means > 2800 30-day readmissions annually.
Research has found that veterans who receive care at the VA have better outcomes than those treated in the private sector. Part of that has to do with practitioners who understand the unique needs of their patients. Veterans may have posttraumatic stress disorder or multiple diagnoses, such as depression, panic disorder, and a substance use disorder. Their mental health issues may also coexist with physical health problems, such as traumatic brain injuries due to explosions.
“If you’re trained at the VA, you learn something important about veteran mental health care that you’ll never get if you’re trained someplace else,” Rodney R. Baker, PhD, retired mental health director and chief of psychology for the South Texas VA Health Care System, said recently. Community clinicians may not know how to collect and incorporate information about a patient’s military history, including details about deployments, combat exposure, injuries, military sexual trauma, and unit culture. They may also lack expertise in navigating the transition between military and veteran life, now considered a critical adjustment period.
“This is a unique population,” said Conwell Smith, the American Psychological Association’s deputy chief of military and veteran policy. “Sending veterans out to the community without requiring that mental health care providers understand them is concerning.”
IMH services aim to stabilize mental health crises and improve veterans’ functioning through patient-centered, evidence-based, and recovery-oriented approaches shown to reduce readmission rates. Treatment generally involves a minimum of 4 hours of interdisciplinary, therapeutic programming each day. And upon discharge, the inpatient care team facilitates the patient’s transition to appropriate outpatient services.
Follow-up care, particularly during the first 30 days, has proved critical in reducing readmissions. In studies that have analyzed postdischarge interventions (psychoeducation, mentoring, community-based hospital treatment, use of continuous follow-up and compulsory community treatment), all found fewer hospitalizations when compared to a control group, or a smaller number of admissions after the intervention.
Mental health care for veterans should be provided by experienced practitioners—but those practitioners are leaving VA. According to the VA Office of Inspector General, 57% of medical centers report a shortage of psychologists. And according to the VA’s monthly Workforce Dashboard, the VHA lost 234 psychologists in the first 9 months of 2025. The VA has also announced plans to cut 30,000 jobs by the end of the year and impose caps on staff at every medical center.
“This approach locks in permanent VA understaffing just as demand for mental health services is projected to continue growing through 2030,” said Russell Lemle, PhD, a clinical psychologist and senior policy analyst for the Veterans Healthcare Policy Institute. “The private sector can’t fill this gap either—over a third of Americans live in areas already facing mental health professional shortages. That’s not taking care of our veterans.
“Unless actions are taken quickly to reverse the trend, its mental health services could easily diminish substantially within 10 to 20 years.”