"Now the Biden administration is saying, we don't want to allow that to happen," he said. Mast sent a letter to VA Secretary Denis McDonough last week demanding an explanation for this apparent "departure from long-standing practices."
Mast warned that interruptions to veterans' care, especially mental health treatments, can have tragic consequences.
"When you talk about some of the issues that are created, when you're switched from doctor to doctor to doctor, there are frustrations that exist, and we all handle frustrations differently. And sometimes those frustrations create serious moments of crisis in your life," Mast said.
"It's really difficult to build a rapport with a provider, a doctor, a therapist, and then to be stripped away of the care that you're used to getting," said Ingrid Hernandez, an Iraq war veteran who runs a PTSD support group in Mast's district. Her community care referral was canceled in March.
The Department of Veterans Affairs denies there's been any change in its policy or budget cuts for community care. The Biden administration's 2025 budget estimates that the Veterans Health Administration will obligate a total of $139.5 billion in 2024. Of this total, community care is expected to comprise $36.5 billion, officials said, a record high.
Veterans who qualify are still eligible to get community care referrals, but what has happened is that fewer veterans can qualify for the program because the VA has expanded facilities and hired more doctors in Florida, according to officials.





