# Identifying Priorities for the Department of Veterans Affairs Strategic Plan: A Rapid Multi‐Method Evaluation

**Authors:** John P. Donnelly, C. Ann Vitous, Kaylee W. Burgan, Gezan M. Yahya, Jessica L. Johnson, Jessica A. McDonald, Nicholas W. Bowersox, Linda M. Kawentel

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/lrh2.70068 · Learning Health Systems · 2026-02-12

## TL;DR

This study identifies key priorities for the Department of Veterans Affairs by analyzing documents, focus groups, and interviews to guide future strategic planning.

## Contribution

The novel aspect is the use of rapid multi-method evaluation to align VA priorities with the needs of Veterans and leaders.

## Key findings

- Key priorities include access to care, health benefits, special groups, and workforce sustainability.
- Differences in priorities were observed across documents, focus groups, and leadership interviews.
- 'Workforce' was most mentioned in documents, while 'Access and Continuity of Care' was top in focus groups.

## Abstract

Understanding the priorities of patients and leaders can help organizations prepare for the future. This evaluation sought to generate actionable data on priorities in support of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) strategic plan, with priorities identified within the literature as well as among Veterans and VA leaders.

A rapid qualitative evaluation was conducted, including a document analysis based on published information, focus groups with Veterans associated with research centers, and semi‐structured interviews with VA leaders. All data were analyzed using rapid qualitative methods, resulting in comprehensive templated descriptions of topics discussed and representative quotes. Summative content analysis was used to report frequencies and identify the most frequently mentioned priorities.

A total of 170 documents (e.g., academic/research articles, government publications) were analyzed. Seventeen Veteran focus groups (92 participants) and 26 semi‐structured interviews with VA leaders (representing 19 program offices) were conducted. There were differences in the most frequently mentioned priorities across sources, with none ranked in the top 5 for all. However, “Access and Continuity of Care,” “Health Benefits,” “Special Groups,” and “Workforce” were among the top 10 mentioned within all sources. Among these, “Workforce” was most mentioned within the document analysis, whereas “Access and Continuity of Care” was most mentioned in focus groups. Both “Health Benefits” and “Access and Continuity of Care” were most mentioned during leadership interviews.

Our findings suggest shared priorities to emphasize as VA looks to the future: improving care access, efficient and effective benefits processing, ensuring the needs of special Veteran groups are met, and sustaining an adequate workforce. However, further work should focus on understanding how Veterans and staff engage with the system to guide the investment of limited organizational resources. This work serves as an example of how rapid evaluation could be applied for strategic planning in other settings.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

21 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12900616/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12900616