VA Preparing for Post-COVID Health Care as Vaccination Demand Decreases
Secretary McDonough said with easing demand for vaccines, the agency is preparing care for long-haul COVID patients.

The Department of Veterans Affairs is looking toward a phase of post-COVID modernization to continue developing and reinforcing the agency’s health care infrastructure and foundational IT resources, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Denis McDonough and Assistant Under Secretary for Health for Clinical Services Dr. Kameron Matthews briefed reporters at a Monday press conference.
Many of these projects center on ensuring complete vaccination of all veterans within the VA network, as well as addressing the enduring symptoms experienced by “long-haul” COVID patients. The agency is currently exploring research projects to provide treatment and care for patients suffering COVID aftereffects, including through partnerships both across government and with academic institutions.
“We’re definitely looking to join conversations across government, but also from coordinating the different research initiatives across VA with our academic affiliates,” Matthews said. “But we need to not wait just for results from research. We need to really start treating these veterans as soon as possible. So we’re going to be developing, similar to other health systems, interdisciplinary long COVID clinics so that there can be multiple specialists actually meeting with these veterans. We may not have all answers and solutions up front, but we’re including our research teams in the development of those clinics.”
McDonough noted that in-person appointments at VA care centers have risen considerably since the start of 2021, with veterans coming in for treatment in the wake of widespread vaccination.
“Our community care scheduled appointments in March were 440,000. In February, they were 338,000. For direct care completed encounters in the VA system in March, there were 8,405,000. In February, it was 6,885,000. So what you’re seeing across both of those is significant demand,” McDonough said. “That’s a pretty significant increase for care in the community. It’s greater than any month going back to January 2020 pre-pandemic.”
The agency has also reached a point of widespread vaccination where daily vaccine appointments are decreasing, a testimony to the scope of VA’s inoculation efforts undertaken since the start of the new year.
“In terms of overall demand for our vaccines, I think two weeks ago we were probably at between 50,000 and 75,000 vaccinations a day. Right now we’re at between 25,000 and 30,000 a day,” McDonough said.
With VA having fulfilled many of its essential responsibilities to provide emergency support during a public health crisis, the agency is now looking to broadly modernize its health care facilities to improve care delivery nationwide. Much of this is encompassed within the recent allocations outlined within President Biden’s proposed American Jobs Plan that would provide VA with $18 billion for infrastructure development. McDonough noted that these infrastructure investments are vital for ensuring that VA care centers can also accommodate new technologies without accruing additional maintenance costs.
“Our average hospital is 59 years old. That’s against an average hospital age in the private sector of 11 years old. The investment for new modernized facilities is outstripped by investment in upkeep of aged facilities,” McDonough said. “That’s why I think the president’s $18 billion investment in the American Jobs Plan is so important.”
This is a carousel with manually rotating slides. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate or jump to a slide with the slide dots
-
Trump Executive Order Boosts HBCUs Role in Building Federal Tech Workforce
The executive order empowers HBCUs to develop tech talent pipelines and expand access to federal workforce opportunities.
3m read -
IHS Prepares to Deploy PATH EHR at Pilot Sites in 2026
IHS targets PATH EHR pilot in 2026, emphasizing governance, collaboration and interoperability as key pillars of the modernization strategy.
4m read -
FEHRM CTO Targets Two-Year Cloud Migration for Federal EHR
Lance Scott touts new EHR tech advancements, including cloud migration, expanded data exchange and AI integration to improve care delivery.
4m read -
Trump Taps Maj. Gen. John Bartrum to Lead VHA
Nominated for VA's top health role, Bartrum brings over four decades of military and public service to the agency.
3m read -
AI Growing in Focus Amid HHS Restructure
Department of Health and Human Services officials see promise in artificial intelligence amid efficiency goals.
4m read -
Federal EHR Leaders Eye Ambient Dictation, Interoperability
Officials from DOD and VA said they are exploring new EHR features such as functionality in offline status and interoperability.
5m read -
Federal Agencies Tout Tech in President Trump’s First 100 Days
Defense modernization and health care restructuring landed among some of the key IT highlights within the president's first few months.
6m read -
VA Secretary Tells Congress Tech Efficiencies Will Help Offset Workforce Reductions
Technology improvements will help allow department to maintain veteran care, VA leadership tells Senate Veterans Affairs Committee.
-
NCI Uses Wearables Data to Link Exercise to Cancer Risk
NCI finds a connection between low-intensity exercise and decreased risk of cancer through data collected from wearable technology.
9m listen -
NCI's Tech-Based Therapy Helps Patients Battle HPV-Linked Respiratory Disease
A new tech-based therapy is helping NCI treat patients who suffer from a respiratory illness associated with HPV.
23m listen -
CDC's Strategic Vision for Faster, Smarter Public Health Response
Dr. Jennifer Layden, a key architect of the CDC's Public Health Data Strategy, shares how modern technology is transforming disease detection and response.
9m listen -
Rising Threats Push Agencies to Revamp Cyber Defenses
NIST and DHMS officials boost data security with the evolution of CSF 2.0 and push toward attribute-based access control amid the rise of AI.
3m read