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  • 7/8/2025
During a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing last month, Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) spoke about VA care in rural communities.
Transcript
00:00To follow on Senator Collins' comments about our rural veterans,
00:07you kind of pointed out that Alaska is in that same bucket.
00:10I'm just going to say we're bigger, we're badder, we're just more complicated, as you know.
00:18And we're very proud to host more veterans per capita in Alaska than anywhere else out there.
00:23And so how we do outreach to our rural veterans has long been a challenge.
00:30You and I have had an opportunity to talk about that.
00:34But it's everything from traveling the long distances.
00:37We're not going to be able to put that veteran in a car, more likely than not.
00:41It's going to be travel that requires flying.
00:46It may be trying to access them through telehealth,
00:51but when you have limited broadband, that's a problem.
00:54Then we have shortages of local health care providers.
00:57So it's complicated in many ways.
01:00But all of our veterans deserve this care, and I think we recognize that.
01:03So know that I, along with Senator Collins,
01:06am very interested in any strategies that you are looking to advance
01:12to maintain and expand services in our rural communities.
01:15I have talked about establishing an outreach program that would send teams to rural areas
01:24that are off-the-road system to just kind of let them know about their benefits,
01:28about the services that are made available.
01:30We can't necessarily do everything, but we can at least let you know this is what your VA can do for you.
01:37And I would hope that you'd work with us to support that kind of an event.
01:42I definitely wouldn't, if you'd allow me to expand just a minute on that.
01:44I think this is one of the issues that I've – I want us to break out of the model in many ways,
01:50and I say this in a very generic fashion.
01:53I want us to break out of the model that everything has to be the way we've always done it.
01:57We have to go to a brick and mortar.
01:58We have to go to this as a clinic.
02:01We have – one of the things, and it just highlighted recently,
02:04we had to close our ambulatory clinic.
02:06And this is not a rural issue, but it sort of plays to the issue.
02:10We had to close our ambulatory clinic in L.A.
02:12because of the riots and other things going on in L.A.
02:16We interrupted almost 1,800 appointments, and some were telehealth, some we were able to move to others.
02:23But for the most part, we had folks who aren't getting care.
02:26Very familiar if you were in the middle of a rural state or Alaska or anywhere else, you're not getting.
02:30So we were already beginning to see how could we bring in mobile clinics and others,
02:35even in that area, in a safe area where our appointments could be kept.
02:39So for me, if we have those kind of resources, can we do those in states such as Alaska and others,
02:45is instead of always just defaulting to something, as you said, like a telehealth model or a visiting doctor,
02:53maybe have regular roundabouts like we have that have our health teams go out with these mobile vehicles
03:03that could actually do and provide primary care and others.
03:05And, of course, they need to go elsewhere.
03:06We could do that.
03:07I think that's a – I'm willing to think outside the box to do that.
03:10It could work in a very rural state.
03:11It could work in a state like, you know, New York, Georgia, anywhere else.
03:14The other thing –
03:15It's just – if I can interrupt on that.
03:16Just – you've kind of picked my brain.
03:20We provide – or there are some nonprofits and some for-profits that provide mobile mammography units
03:27that go out to put them on a barge, you go up the river.
03:30It has provided access to women in rural parts of the state that would never be able to get this kind of screening.
03:37You can do that kind of teaming, but you do have to be willing to think outside the box a little bit.
03:44And I appreciate that you're looking into that.
03:47Let me ask you here about the tribal health side.
03:54I'm pleased that IHS and VA have entered into a reimbursement agreement
04:00as we're trying to figure out how we access some of the unique challenges in VA services.
04:10Office of Tribal Government Relations.
04:12This is – this is an office that has proven to be important.
04:19I would like to know if you think that that Government Relations Office will continue.
04:26And then the VA Advisory Committee on Tribal and Indian Affairs.
04:30This is another VA advisory body.
04:34This is under review.
04:36Know that the committee really does play a vital role in ensuring that Native voices are represented
04:44when VA policies are developed.
04:47We think that it's good.
04:49It helps to advance culturally competent care, strengthens tribal consultation,
04:53and helps the VA fulfill its commitment.
04:56So I don't know if you can give me an update on the current status of this committee
05:00and whether its work will continue uninterrupted.
05:04And then if you can share with me whether or not you think the Office of Tribal Government Relations will continue.
05:10Yes.
05:11That's an yes to both.
05:13They're both going to be continuing.
05:14And also, yeah, we're continuing to outreach as well.
05:17And we're – as I said earlier, we're making sure our intergovernmental offices
05:22and working with different organizations is strengthening.
05:25We brought in our caseload to make sure that we're reaching out to states, tribes, and others,
05:31that that is being a part of what we do.
05:32So they're both increasing.
05:34And also, I'm looking forward to being, I think, if my schedule is – if they've told me correctly,
05:39I'll be up there in October, I think, around some of these issues that will be going on with the tribes.
05:43Great.
05:43I think hopefully you're coinciding – or you're scheduling that trip to coincide with the Alaska Federation of a Native Conference in October.
05:51I believe it is, yes.
05:52That's great.
05:53Mr. Chairman, I've got a couple of questions that I'm going to submit for the record.
05:56One is on the roof of the Palmer Pioneer Home.
05:59I can't let a hearing go by without mentioning that, as well as the electronic health record rollout.
06:06As you know, the Alaska VA system is going to get the rollout of this technology in 2026.
06:11There's a lot of people anxious about that because previous rollouts have not exactly been fun.
06:16So you will see those questions submitted for the record.
06:19I look forward to that, and maybe later on, you know, we'll discuss that, and I'll look forward –
06:22That'd be excellent.
06:22The electronic health record is very important.
06:24Yes, it sure is.
06:25Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:27Senator Baldwin.
06:28Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:29Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:30Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:31Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:32Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:33Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:34Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:35Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:36Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:37Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:38Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:39Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:40Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:41Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:42Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:43Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:44Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:45Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:46Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:47Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:48Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:49Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:50Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:51Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
06:52Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

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