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This article has been updated with a response from the US Department of Veterans Affairs.
The number of US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) geriatric mental health professionals is failing to keep pace with a growing population of older veterans: nearly 8 million are aged ≥ 65 years. VA psychologists may treat older veterans in primary care settings or community living centers, but many lack formal training in geropsychology.
Some psychologists with the proper training to treat this population are leaving the workforce; a survey by the VA Office of Inspector General found psychology was the most frequently reported severe clinical occupational staffing shortage and the most frequently reported Hybrid Title 38 severe shortage occupation, with 57% of 139 facilities reporting it as a shortage. According to the September Workforce Dashboard, the VA has lost > 200 psychologists in 2025.
Veterans aged ≥ 65 years have higher rates of combined medical and mental health diagnoses than younger veterans and older nonveterans. Nearly 1 of 5 older veterans enrolled in US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care services have confirmed mental health diagnoses, and another 26% have documented mental health concerns without a formal diagnosis in their health record.
Older veterans also tend to have more complex mental health issues than younger adults. Posttraumatic stress nearly doubles their risk of dementia, and their psychiatric diagnoses may be complicated by co-occurring delirium, social isolation/loneliness, and polypharmacy.
According to reporting by The War Horse, the VA has been instituting limits on one-on-one mental health therapy and transitioning veterans to lower levels of treatment after having been told to stop treating them for long, indeterminate periods prior to referring them to group therapy, primary care, or discharging them altogether. In a statement to Federal Practitioner, VA Press Secretary Pete Kasperowicz refuted the reporting from The War Horse.
"The War Horse story is false. VA does not put caps on one-on-one mental health sessions for veterans with clinical care needs," he told Federal Practitioner. "VA works with veterans over an initial eight to 15 mental health sessions, and collaboratively plans any needed follow-on care. As part of this process, veterans and their health care team decide together how to address ongoing needs, including whether to step down to other types of care and self-maintenance, or continue with VA therapy."
The smaller pool of qualified mental health practitioners also may be due to medical students not knowing enough about the category. A study of 136 medical students and 61 internal medicine residents at an academic health center evaluated their beliefs and attitudes regarding 25 content areas essential to the primary care of older adults. Students and residents expressed similar beliefs about the importance of content areas, and attitudes toward aging did not appreciably differ. However, students rated lower in knowledge in areas surrounding general primary care, such as chronic conditions and medications. Residents reported larger gap scores in areas that reflected specialists’ expertise (eg, driving risk, cognition, and psychiatric symptoms).
VA does have channels for filling the gap in geriatric health care. Established in 1975, Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Centers (GRECCs), are the department’s centers of excellence focused on aging. Currently, there are 20 GRECCs across the country, each connected with a major research university. Studies focus on aging, for example, examining the effects of Alzheimer’s disease or traumatic brain injuries.
Geriatric Scholars
To specifically fill the gap in mental health care, the Geriatric Scholars Program (GSP) was developed in 2008. Initially focused on primary care physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and pharmacists, the program later expanded to include other disciplines, including psychiatrists. In 2013, the GSP–Psychology Track (GSP-P) was developed because there were no commercially available training in geropsychology for licensed psychologists. GSP-P is based on an evidence-based educational model for the VA primary care workforce and includes a stepwise curriculum design, pilot implementation, and program evaluation.
A recent survey that assessed the track’s effectiveness found respondents “strongly agreed” that participation in the program improved their geropsychology knowledge and skills. That positive reaction led to shifts in practice that had a positive impact on VA organizational goals. Several GSP-P graduates have become board certified in geropsychology and many proceed to supervise geropsychology-focused clinical rotations for psychology practicum students, predoctoral interns, and postdoctoral fellows.
Whether programs such as GSP-P can adequately address the dwindling number of VA mental health care professionals remains to be seen. More than 160 doctors, psychologists, nurses, and researchers sent a letter to VA Secretary Doug Collins, the VA inspector general, and congressional leaders on Sept. 24 warning that workforce reductions and moves to outsource care will harm veterans.
“We have witnessed these ongoing harms and can provide evidence and testimony of their impacts,” the letter read. By the next day, the number of signees had increased to 350.
Though these shortages may impact their mental health care, older veterans could have an edge in mental resilience. While research in younger adults has found positive linear associations between physical health difficulties and severity of psychiatric symptoms, older veterans may benefit from what researchers have called an “aging paradox,” in which mental health improves later in life despite declining physical and cognitive function. A 2021 study suggests that prevention and treatment strategies designed to foster attachment security, mindfulness, and purpose in life may help enhance psychological resilience to physical health difficulties in older veterans.
This article has been updated with a response from the US Department of Veterans Affairs.
The number of US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) geriatric mental health professionals is failing to keep pace with a growing population of older veterans: nearly 8 million are aged ≥ 65 years. VA psychologists may treat older veterans in primary care settings or community living centers, but many lack formal training in geropsychology.
Some psychologists with the proper training to treat this population are leaving the workforce; a survey by the VA Office of Inspector General found psychology was the most frequently reported severe clinical occupational staffing shortage and the most frequently reported Hybrid Title 38 severe shortage occupation, with 57% of 139 facilities reporting it as a shortage. According to the September Workforce Dashboard, the VA has lost > 200 psychologists in 2025.
Veterans aged ≥ 65 years have higher rates of combined medical and mental health diagnoses than younger veterans and older nonveterans. Nearly 1 of 5 older veterans enrolled in US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care services have confirmed mental health diagnoses, and another 26% have documented mental health concerns without a formal diagnosis in their health record.
Older veterans also tend to have more complex mental health issues than younger adults. Posttraumatic stress nearly doubles their risk of dementia, and their psychiatric diagnoses may be complicated by co-occurring delirium, social isolation/loneliness, and polypharmacy.
According to reporting by The War Horse, the VA has been instituting limits on one-on-one mental health therapy and transitioning veterans to lower levels of treatment after having been told to stop treating them for long, indeterminate periods prior to referring them to group therapy, primary care, or discharging them altogether. In a statement to Federal Practitioner, VA Press Secretary Pete Kasperowicz refuted the reporting from The War Horse.
"The War Horse story is false. VA does not put caps on one-on-one mental health sessions for veterans with clinical care needs," he told Federal Practitioner. "VA works with veterans over an initial eight to 15 mental health sessions, and collaboratively plans any needed follow-on care. As part of this process, veterans and their health care team decide together how to address ongoing needs, including whether to step down to other types of care and self-maintenance, or continue with VA therapy."
The smaller pool of qualified mental health practitioners also may be due to medical students not knowing enough about the category. A study of 136 medical students and 61 internal medicine residents at an academic health center evaluated their beliefs and attitudes regarding 25 content areas essential to the primary care of older adults. Students and residents expressed similar beliefs about the importance of content areas, and attitudes toward aging did not appreciably differ. However, students rated lower in knowledge in areas surrounding general primary care, such as chronic conditions and medications. Residents reported larger gap scores in areas that reflected specialists’ expertise (eg, driving risk, cognition, and psychiatric symptoms).
VA does have channels for filling the gap in geriatric health care. Established in 1975, Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Centers (GRECCs), are the department’s centers of excellence focused on aging. Currently, there are 20 GRECCs across the country, each connected with a major research university. Studies focus on aging, for example, examining the effects of Alzheimer’s disease or traumatic brain injuries.
Geriatric Scholars
To specifically fill the gap in mental health care, the Geriatric Scholars Program (GSP) was developed in 2008. Initially focused on primary care physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and pharmacists, the program later expanded to include other disciplines, including psychiatrists. In 2013, the GSP–Psychology Track (GSP-P) was developed because there were no commercially available training in geropsychology for licensed psychologists. GSP-P is based on an evidence-based educational model for the VA primary care workforce and includes a stepwise curriculum design, pilot implementation, and program evaluation.
A recent survey that assessed the track’s effectiveness found respondents “strongly agreed” that participation in the program improved their geropsychology knowledge and skills. That positive reaction led to shifts in practice that had a positive impact on VA organizational goals. Several GSP-P graduates have become board certified in geropsychology and many proceed to supervise geropsychology-focused clinical rotations for psychology practicum students, predoctoral interns, and postdoctoral fellows.
Whether programs such as GSP-P can adequately address the dwindling number of VA mental health care professionals remains to be seen. More than 160 doctors, psychologists, nurses, and researchers sent a letter to VA Secretary Doug Collins, the VA inspector general, and congressional leaders on Sept. 24 warning that workforce reductions and moves to outsource care will harm veterans.
“We have witnessed these ongoing harms and can provide evidence and testimony of their impacts,” the letter read. By the next day, the number of signees had increased to 350.
Though these shortages may impact their mental health care, older veterans could have an edge in mental resilience. While research in younger adults has found positive linear associations between physical health difficulties and severity of psychiatric symptoms, older veterans may benefit from what researchers have called an “aging paradox,” in which mental health improves later in life despite declining physical and cognitive function. A 2021 study suggests that prevention and treatment strategies designed to foster attachment security, mindfulness, and purpose in life may help enhance psychological resilience to physical health difficulties in older veterans.
This article has been updated with a response from the US Department of Veterans Affairs.
The number of US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) geriatric mental health professionals is failing to keep pace with a growing population of older veterans: nearly 8 million are aged ≥ 65 years. VA psychologists may treat older veterans in primary care settings or community living centers, but many lack formal training in geropsychology.
Some psychologists with the proper training to treat this population are leaving the workforce; a survey by the VA Office of Inspector General found psychology was the most frequently reported severe clinical occupational staffing shortage and the most frequently reported Hybrid Title 38 severe shortage occupation, with 57% of 139 facilities reporting it as a shortage. According to the September Workforce Dashboard, the VA has lost > 200 psychologists in 2025.
Veterans aged ≥ 65 years have higher rates of combined medical and mental health diagnoses than younger veterans and older nonveterans. Nearly 1 of 5 older veterans enrolled in US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care services have confirmed mental health diagnoses, and another 26% have documented mental health concerns without a formal diagnosis in their health record.
Older veterans also tend to have more complex mental health issues than younger adults. Posttraumatic stress nearly doubles their risk of dementia, and their psychiatric diagnoses may be complicated by co-occurring delirium, social isolation/loneliness, and polypharmacy.
According to reporting by The War Horse, the VA has been instituting limits on one-on-one mental health therapy and transitioning veterans to lower levels of treatment after having been told to stop treating them for long, indeterminate periods prior to referring them to group therapy, primary care, or discharging them altogether. In a statement to Federal Practitioner, VA Press Secretary Pete Kasperowicz refuted the reporting from The War Horse.
"The War Horse story is false. VA does not put caps on one-on-one mental health sessions for veterans with clinical care needs," he told Federal Practitioner. "VA works with veterans over an initial eight to 15 mental health sessions, and collaboratively plans any needed follow-on care. As part of this process, veterans and their health care team decide together how to address ongoing needs, including whether to step down to other types of care and self-maintenance, or continue with VA therapy."
The smaller pool of qualified mental health practitioners also may be due to medical students not knowing enough about the category. A study of 136 medical students and 61 internal medicine residents at an academic health center evaluated their beliefs and attitudes regarding 25 content areas essential to the primary care of older adults. Students and residents expressed similar beliefs about the importance of content areas, and attitudes toward aging did not appreciably differ. However, students rated lower in knowledge in areas surrounding general primary care, such as chronic conditions and medications. Residents reported larger gap scores in areas that reflected specialists’ expertise (eg, driving risk, cognition, and psychiatric symptoms).
VA does have channels for filling the gap in geriatric health care. Established in 1975, Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Centers (GRECCs), are the department’s centers of excellence focused on aging. Currently, there are 20 GRECCs across the country, each connected with a major research university. Studies focus on aging, for example, examining the effects of Alzheimer’s disease or traumatic brain injuries.
Geriatric Scholars
To specifically fill the gap in mental health care, the Geriatric Scholars Program (GSP) was developed in 2008. Initially focused on primary care physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and pharmacists, the program later expanded to include other disciplines, including psychiatrists. In 2013, the GSP–Psychology Track (GSP-P) was developed because there were no commercially available training in geropsychology for licensed psychologists. GSP-P is based on an evidence-based educational model for the VA primary care workforce and includes a stepwise curriculum design, pilot implementation, and program evaluation.
A recent survey that assessed the track’s effectiveness found respondents “strongly agreed” that participation in the program improved their geropsychology knowledge and skills. That positive reaction led to shifts in practice that had a positive impact on VA organizational goals. Several GSP-P graduates have become board certified in geropsychology and many proceed to supervise geropsychology-focused clinical rotations for psychology practicum students, predoctoral interns, and postdoctoral fellows.
Whether programs such as GSP-P can adequately address the dwindling number of VA mental health care professionals remains to be seen. More than 160 doctors, psychologists, nurses, and researchers sent a letter to VA Secretary Doug Collins, the VA inspector general, and congressional leaders on Sept. 24 warning that workforce reductions and moves to outsource care will harm veterans.
“We have witnessed these ongoing harms and can provide evidence and testimony of their impacts,” the letter read. By the next day, the number of signees had increased to 350.
Though these shortages may impact their mental health care, older veterans could have an edge in mental resilience. While research in younger adults has found positive linear associations between physical health difficulties and severity of psychiatric symptoms, older veterans may benefit from what researchers have called an “aging paradox,” in which mental health improves later in life despite declining physical and cognitive function. A 2021 study suggests that prevention and treatment strategies designed to foster attachment security, mindfulness, and purpose in life may help enhance psychological resilience to physical health difficulties in older veterans.