VA vs. Private Rehab — What Each Offers
VA facilities:
- No cost to eligible veterans (service-connected status affects priority)
- Evidence-based PTSD-SUD integrated care programs
- Access to VA psychiatric services and ongoing care continuity
- Wait times can be long, particularly for non-service-connected
- More limited amenities and program variety
Private inpatient programs using VA Community Care:
- No cost to veteran when Community Care is authorized
- Often faster admission than VA
- More privacy, particularly for veterans who prefer not to be in VA settings
- Wider program variety and specialized options (trauma-focused programs, etc.)
- Requires Community Care authorization before admission
How to Use VA Community Care for Private Rehab
- Confirm Community Care eligibility: Contact your VA healthcare provider or VA patient advocate
- Clinical evaluation: A VA provider documents substance use disorder and recommends level of care
- Facility identification: Identify a Community Care-participating facility with availability
- Authorization: VA issues Community Care authorization to the facility
- Admission: Facility coordinates admission; VA pays the facility directly
Call (888) 368-3288 — we work with Community Care-participating facilities and can help coordinate the authorization process.
PTSD and Addiction — The Military Connection
The overlap between PTSD and substance use in veterans is well-documented. Common patterns:
- Alcohol use for sleep: Chronic insomnia drives alcohol use; alcohol worsens sleep architecture long-term
- Opioids for pain: Legitimate pain management for service-related injuries can progress to dependence
- Stimulants for hyperarousal: Less common but seen in some patients
- Cannabis for anxiety: Increasingly common as medical and recreational access has expanded
Evidence-based integrated treatment addresses both conditions simultaneously — this is the core principle of concurrent treatment (formerly "dual diagnosis"). Sequential treatment (treating one before the other) produces worse outcomes than integrated care.
MST and Substance Use
Military Sexual Trauma (MST) is a significant driver of substance use in both male and female veterans. Specific considerations:
- VA offers MST-specific treatment programs at no cost regardless of service-connection status
- Private programs with trauma-informed MST expertise are available via Community Care
- Gender-specific programming is often clinically preferred for MST-related trauma
- Therapies: Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT), Prolonged Exposure (PE), EMDR
Veteran-Specific Treatment Programs
Beyond basic veteran admission, some programs offer veteran-specific tracks: all-veteran groups, veteran peer support specialists, VA benefits coordination, compensation and pension examination support, and specific PTSD-SUD integrated care. For veterans who prefer to be in community with other veterans during treatment, these programs provide clinical advantages.
Get Confidential Help Now
Our placement coordinators are available 24/7 to help you find an available inpatient bed.
Call (888) 368-3288