Veteran’s Administration has Lost Thousands of ‘Core’ Medical Staff under Trump

This piece is over two months old. It still has relevance to the current issue of an understaffed VA and still pertinent. The issues with the VA have been ongoing for years. It is not something new. However, the situation has worsened under the Tru_p administration as they have taken a more aggressive role to end it.

VA records reveal, the agency treating veterans lost thousands of staff. I too use the VA. I also use the commercial healthcare system. Not because of a lack of VA capability or care. It appears the Tru_p administration again is trying to eliminate the VA and push Vetreans into commercial healthcare. To me, this is another attempt to discontinue the VA providing care to veterans, This time by the Trump administration. I go to commercial healthcare due to availability of care.

The Department of Veterans Affairs has lost thousands of healthcare professionals deemed “core” to the system’s ability to function and “without which mission-critical work cannot be completed”, agency records show.

The number of medical staff on hand to treat veterans has fallen every month since Donald Trump took office. The VA has experienced a net loss of 2,000 registered nurses since the start of this fiscal year, the data show, along with approximately 1,300 medical assistants, 1,100 nursing assistants and licensed practical nurses, 800 doctors, 500 social workers and 150 psychologists.

“It’s a betrayal,” said Manuel Santamaria, 42, a disabled veteran who served as a US army medic and paratrooper in Iraq and Afghanistan. “It takes away the government’s accountability to veterans who have sacrificed for them.”

The VA said in a statement to the Guardian that the fear of privatization “is a far-left canard” and that “anyone who says VA is cutting health care and benefits is not being honest”.

I agree with Manuel. Not only does it take away accountability of the nation to its veterans. It exposes veterans to lesser care and commercial healthcare.

At the VA in Augusta, Georgia, Fieldings filed five reports alleging conditions that “posed a serious threat to health and safety of patients” in the spinal cord unit between April and July. On 6 June, she wrote that two registered nurses had been tasked with caring for 10 patients, seven of whom were on ventilators and all of whom were at high risk of falls. On 24 July, she reported three nurses were charged with taking care of nine veteran patients, all of whom had been placed in isolation. “Staff were not properly trained,” she indicated, and the unit was staffed with “unqualified” or “inappropriate personnel”.

“These are some of our most vulnerable patients,” Fieldings said in an interview. “They have difficulty eating. Many have broken their necks.”

She said departures had also led to regular forced overtime for nurses, leaving them exhausted. “Nurses stay until their moral distress is so great that they can’t take it anymore and then they leave,”.

In its statement, the VA said reports of unsafe conditions in Augusta’s spinal cord unit were “false”and that “the unit is fully staffed”. The VA did not respond to reports alleging unsafe conditions at the agency’s hospital in the Bronx. It said the Guardian was “cherry picking issues that are mostly routine, limited to a handful of sites and in many cases were worse under the Biden administration”.

The unions, who say their right to bargain collectively cannot be voided on “national security” grounds, said they would press their case in the courts.

At the VA Northport medical center on Long Island, a virtual town hall on 30 July with the hospital director, Antonio Sanchez, devolved; the chat function in Microsoft Teams burst with complaints. “We are desperate. We are getting burnt out,” a clinician in the facility’s inpatient medical unit wrote. “We are not able to keep pace with our cut in staff.”

Others raised concerns about short staffing and patient care across other critical care units at Northport, the Teams chat shows, including the intensive care unit, post-anesthesia care unit and community living centers, the VA’s version of nursing home care.

Near the end of the meeting, Sanchez responded that he was “working hard” to bring staff onboard as soon as possible.

Veterans advocates and employee unions allege the Trump administration is consciously seeking to starve the veterans healthcare system so it can be turned into a private voucher program. The administration’s budget proposal for 2026 includes a major realignment of priorities – a 50% increase in taxpayer funding for private healthcare for veterans, $11bn, paid for by a corresponding cut to the existing public system.

In Las Vegas, Santamaria bristled at the suggestion the VA was bloated. He said difficulties scheduling appointments have “gotten much worse” under Trump – and that he now often spends more than two hours on hold.

In addition to post-traumatic stress disorder, Santamaria suffers from psoriasis, a skin disease that causes a rash with itchy scaly patches that disrupt his sleep and make it hard to concentrate. In February, when his medication ran out, Santamaria sought to switch to a different drug, but was unable to schedule an appointment with the VA until May. By then his entire body was covered by cracked, bleeding welts.

In its statement, the VA blamed the delays Santamaria faced on a lack of communication from the private dermatologist he saw through the agency’s “community care” voucher program. Once that doctor filled out the proper paperwork, “new medication was mailed out just five days later”, the agency said.

The agency said the average wait time on phone calls placed to the VA in southern Nevada was one minute and 47 seconds. Santamaria said VA workers typically answer the phone relatively quickly, before putting him on hold for two hours or more.

The Guardian asked the VA for data in order to compare patient wait times during the Trump and Biden administrations at each VA facility. The VA did not provide it, but shared a chart that indicated wait times for some health services had marginally improved this fiscal year, while others had worsened. The fiscal year covers the final three and a half months of the Biden administration and first six months of Trump’s second term.

The VA’s workforce dashboards show the decline in staffing was accelerating. In February, the VA reported a net loss of 223 registered nurses and 94 doctors; in June the VA lost an additional 409 registered nurses and 147 doctors.

The VA declined to answer questions on the acceleration in the reduction of “mission-critical” medical workers employed in agency hospitals and clinics.

Those staffing losses do not include 10,000 VA workers who accepted deferred resignation offers early in Trump’s second term, whose last day on the books will be 30 September.