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With the rapid expansion of veterans’ access to community care under the Veterans Affairs Maintaining Internal Systems and Strengthening Integrated Outside Networks (VA MISSION) Act of 2018, ensuring that veterans receive high-quality community care has become a national priority. Using Veterans Health Administration (VHA) data and Medicare performance scores, we assessed how clinicians’ performance on quality measures differed between those who treated veterans within the VHA Community Care Network and those who did not. We found that in 2022, 66.0 percent of community-based clinicians treated VHA enrollees. These clinicians were more likely to be male, have less practice experience, be affiliated with group practices, and be based in rural and socially vulnerable areas compared with clinicians who did not treat VHA enrollees. Notably, clinicians in the lowest quartile of quality performance measures were 8.8 percentage points more likely to treat VHA enrollees than those in the highest quartile. This pattern was most pronounced among primary care and mental health clinicians, and it persisted across VHA Community Care Network regions. These results underscore the need for federal efforts to ensure that veterans receive care from high-performing community clinicians.

Financial toxicity is the detrimental impact of health care costs that must be mitigated to achieve universal health coverage. Catastrophic health expenditure (CHE) is widely used to measure financial toxicity but does not capture patient perspectives of unaffordable health care costs. Financial hardship (FH), a patient-reported outcome measure, is currently underutilized but may be an important adjunct metric. The authors compare CHE to FH as metrics evaluating financial toxicity.

Although interventions to change nutrition policies, systems, and environments (PSE) for children are generally cost-effective for preventing childhood obesity, existing evidence suggests that nutrition education curricula, without accompanying PSE changes, are more commonly implemented.

More than half of patients with cancer receive radiotherapy, which often requires daily treatments for several weeks. The impact of geographic and sociodemographic factors on the odds of patients with cancer being recommended radiotherapy, starting radiotherapy, and completing radiotherapy is not well understood.