Study finds Hispanic veterans wait longer for specialists

Written by Parriva — February 23, 2023
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Black and Hispanic veterans’ access to specialty health care declined during the pandemic, according to a recently published study that also found non-Hispanic white veterans were largely unaffected.
About 12% of vets are Black and 8% are Latino. Those numbers are projected to grow to 15% and 12% respectively by 2045, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Disparities in access to treatment can have wide-ranging consequences, from mental health problems to complicating adjustment to civilian life.
The study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association late last month, looked at wait times for over a million veterans seeking cardiology or orthopedic appointments, two of the most common specialty services that the VA provides.
The researchers found wait times for Hispanic vets increased by five days for cardiology services and four days for orthopedic ones from 2019 to the 2021 fiscal year compared to the wait times for white non-Hispanics.
The Government Accountability Office recently also found appointment delays and recommended the VA “develop a timeliness standard.”
What they’re saying: “It might be that white veterans were better informed about ways to accelerate those wait periods, whereas Latino and Black veterans maybe weren’t,” says Raul “Danny” Vargas, founder and CEO of the American Latino Veterans Association.
“The bottom line from my perspective is that Latino veterans continue to be an increasingly important and significant portion of the overall veteran population, but there are nuances and subtle differences in terms of how that population needs to be engaged or approached.”

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