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A closer look at what happens after care begins
Nearly half of women veterans have canceled a medical appointment because of childcare Not because care wasn’t available. Not because they didn’t seek it. Because something outside the clinical setting got in the way. For years, the conversation has focused on access: How do we get people into care? But for many women veterans, especially mothers, the challenge begins after the appointment is already scheduled. Eight in ten women veterans report satisfaction with the care they receive Access has improved. Trust is high. And yet, care is still being interrupted. One of the most consistent reasons is not clinical. It’s logistical. Childcare. 42% of women veterans ages 18–34 and 36% ages 35–44 require childcare during medical appointments 40% report difficulty finding childcare for those appointments 46% have canceled a medical appointment in the past year because of it These are not access failures. They are completion breakdowns. Care was scheduled. Care was needed. Care did not happen. This pattern extends beyond any single barrier. Approximately 4 in 10 U.S. adults report delaying or skipping recommended medical care due to cost, Kaiser Family Foundation Even among insured populations, a significant share still forgo care due to out of pocket expenses, The Commonwealth Fund Different barriers. Same outcome. Care is interrupted. This is not a question of motivation. It is not a question of awareness. And it is not a reflection of system quality. The issue is something else: The conditions required to complete care are not always in place. Where MNF Fits The Medic Now Foundation focuses on what happens between scheduling care and completing it. For many women veterans, that gap is not clinical. It’s practical. Childcare is one example. Out-of-pocket costs are another. These are small, time-sensitive barriers, but they can determine whether care happens at all. Healthcare systems perform best when patients are able to complete the care they begin. Care that is started but not completed is still lost care. The challenge today is no longer just access. It’s completion. Sources Study of Barriers for Women Veterans to VA Health Care, 2023–2024, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Advisory Committee on Women Veterans, 2024 findings, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Kaiser Family Foundation The Commonwealth Fund
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BBNB NEWS:The Medic Now Foundation Inc (MNF), Breaking Barriers News Blog is a news blog for frontline organizations serving our military communities. Archives
March 2026
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