Joseph Webster is a Staff Physician, and Patricia Young is National Amputation Program Manager at Central Virginia Veterans Affairs Health Care System in Richmond. Joel Scholten is Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation National Program Director at Rehabilitation and Prosthetic Services, US Department of Veterans Affairs in Washington, DC. Billie Randolph is Deputy Director at the Veterans Affairs Extremity Trauma and Amputation Center of Excellence in Washington, DC. Joseph Webster is a Professor in the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at the School of Medicine at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond. Correspondence: Joseph Webster (joseph.webster@va.gov)
Author disclosures The authors report no actual or potential conflicts of interest with regard to this article.
Disclaimer The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Federal Practitioner, Frontline Medical Communications Inc., the US Government, or any of its agencies.
Background: The goal of the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Amputation System of Care (ASoC) is to enhance the quality and consistency of amputation rehabilitation care for veterans with limb loss.
Objective: The ASoC provides specialized expertise in amputation rehabilitation incorporating the latest practices in medical management, rehabilitation, and artificial limbs in order to minimize disability and to enable the highest level of social, vocational, and recreational success for veterans with amputation.
Discussion: The ASoC serves veterans with limb amputation from any etiology. Between 2009 and 2019, the VA experienced a 34% increase in the number of veterans with amputation who received care. During the same 10-year period, the percentage of veterans with major limb amputation seen in an outpatient amputation specialty clinic each year increased from 4.8 to 26%. This article highlights how the mission of the ASoC has been accomplished over the past decade through prioritization and implementation of key strategic initiatives in learning organization creation, trust in VA care, modernization, and development of a high-performance network with enhanced access and customer service.
Conclusions: This synopsis of the VA amputation care program serves as a model of amputation care that can be utilized outside the federal sector and has the potential to serve as a systems-based example for providing longitudinal care to other populations within the VA.
The US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) established a formal Amputation System of Care (ASoC) in 2008 with the goal of enhancing the quality and consistency of amputation rehabilitation care for veterans with limb loss.1,2 Throughout its history, the VA has placed a high priority on the care that is provided to veterans with limb amputation.1,3 Amputations have medical, physical, social, and psychological ramifications for the veteran and his or her family. Therefore, management of veterans with limb loss requires a comprehensive, coordinated, transdisciplinary program of services throughout the continuum of care. This includes offering the latest practices in medical interventions, artificial limbs, assistive technologies, and rehabilitation strategies to restore function and thereby optimize quality of life.
Amputation System of Care
The ASoC is an integrated system within the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) that provides specialized expertise in amputation rehabilitation incorporating the latest practices in medical management, rehabilitation therapies, artificial limbs, and assistive technologies. The system facilitates patient-centered, gender-sensitive, lifelong care and care coordination across the entire health continuum from acute inpatient hospitalization through a spectrum of inpatient, residential, and outpatient rehabilitation care settings. Through the provision of quality rehabilitation and prosthetic limb care, the ASoC strives to minimize disability and enable the highest level of social, vocational, and recreational success for veterans with an amputation.1-3