VA assembled more than 450 VA health care decision-makers and clinicians, including all VA medical center directors in Washington D.C. last week for one purpose – improving the Patient Experience at VA. The 2019 VA Patient Experience Symposium allowed VA employees to share best practices and align in support of Secretary Wilkie’s prime directive, customer service.

Dr. Richard Stone, Executive in Charge, Veterans Health Administration, speaks about the patient experience at the VA PX Symposium.

Dr. Richard Stone, executive in charge, Veterans Health Administration, speaks about the patient experience at the VA PX Symposium.

Dr. Richard Stone, executive in charge of the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) set the tone for the conference stating, “When a patient chooses to come see you, you earn the next visit by whether or not you instill trust. That trust is very fragile and can be eroded easily by every experience Veterans have, even if you don’t have anything to do with it.”

The symposium may have re-emphasized VA’s commitment to customer service, but it didn’t start here. Over the past 18 months, the Veterans Experience Office has supported each VA Medical Center in some way, all VA Hospitals have implemented Red Coat Ambassadors, and more than 60,000 VHA employees have completed the Own the Moment Customer Experience Workshop. This in addition to the thousands of dedicated VHA employees who have challenged every process to ensure the Veteran was at the center, piloting and creating new projects – all to see what makes life easiest for their Veteran patients.

VA sites of care are more than just a brick and mortar building to stop by for a health care appointment. They are communities, supported by Veterans, their families, caregivers, survivors, veteran service organizations, volunteers and employees.

Red Coat Ambassadors are now at every VA medical center across the U.S., another way to improve the patient experience.

Red Coat Ambassadors are now at every VA medical center across the U.S., another way to improve the patient experience.

There are a lot of factors that determine a positive patient experience, it could be a warm greeting at the front desk, a Red Coat volunteer walking Veterans to an appointment, clear signage or parking access. Putting the Veteran and their family at the center of all VA data, technology, tools, and engagement strategies will guide culture change and improve sustainment of programs within VA.

The results of a recent VA customer experience feedback survey showed an average 2.4 percent increase in Veteran trust of VA hospitals during fiscal year (FY) 2018.

Beginning in fall 2017 through September 2018, VA surveyed 1,660,563 Veterans regarding their trust of VA health care outpatient services and found that the “trust scores” of 128 out of 139 VA medical centers increased by an average of 2.4 percent by the end of Fiscal Year 2018.

Veteran Herschel "Woody" Williams meets Tampa VA service dog Hercules at the VA PX Symposium.

Medal of Honor recipient Herschel “Woody” Williams meets Tampa VA service dog Hercules at the VA PX Symposium.

“Listening to our Veteran patients plays an important role in providing world class customer service,” said VA Secretary Robert Wilkie. “VA is not only listening to our

Veterans, but we are taking action on their concerns as well as their recommendations to improve VA health care.”

An additional quarterly VA-wide survey, asking Veterans if they “trust VA to fulfill our country’s commitment to Veterans,” scored as 55 percent saying yes, they trust VA in 2016 with an increase to 73 percent saying they trust the VA at the end of 2018.

Medal of Honor recipient and former VA employee, Herschel “Woody” Williams told the group, “None of us could exist in this world alone, we must have service to others to exist, to survive.” Williams began working for the Huntington VA in West Virginia in 1946 and it is now named after him.

While patient experience is very complex and fragile, it must be the centerpiece of ALL we do.

Watch the three-day VA Patient Experience Symposium replays on VA YouTube.

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3 Comments

  1. Dennis Fitzgerald 3380 February 15, 2019 at 12:49

    I find it very difficult to trust VA, the Raters and people handling claims have taken “duty to assist “ as a challenge and as a DUTY TO OBSTRUCT & DENY! They are aggressive in denying claims and focus on two things: DENYING CLAIMS and moving claims fast by rubber stamping DENIED as a method of obtaining bonus money based on metrics of the number of claims closed!
    This is exactly what leads to and maintains the backlog in Appeals!
    VA should implement a program similar to claims adjusters in the civilian world for disasters : BONUSES ONLY GIVEN BASED ON BENEFITS/CLY GRANTED & the dollar amount of these claims properly processed!
    I find trusting an agency that has financially ruined me and repeatedly refuses to legally grant EQUITABLE RELIEF for my losses related to military services and VA TREATMENT!
    So far I’ve experienced lies, complete refusal to process the clearest of legal presidence and evidence! It’s abuse of the disabled and fundamentally cheating veterans out of millions !

    Dennis Fitzgerald USAF 75-79

  2. Brenda Hayes February 13, 2019 at 16:28

    YOUR IT PERSONNEL SUCKS**** It just wiped my complaint when it took me back to page to fix my email address** Simple things like this and you don’t believe you can’t fix the bigger things on your own????????????????

  3. Vincent Bertone February 12, 2019 at 13:41

    A disaster In WWII
    My brother was in WWII Navy his name is Isidore Bertone he was on the Navy ship called the Zircon. His ship helped when another ship sank off the coast of Boston, Ma (YF-415) The men of the Zercon took great risk to rescue as many sailors. I feel that my brother and the men of the Zircon didn’t receive the credit they deserve for what they did.

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