In the past four years, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has ex
perienced unprecedented changes in the ways it provides medical care,
trains medical residents, and supports its clinical research program,
For the most part, these changes have improved the quality and efficie
ncy of care provided to veterans, and they have improved the chances t
hat the VA will survive in an increasingly competitive medical market
place. While the changes in priorities for training medical residents
and funding clinical research have been designed to be more consistent
with the overall mission of the VA, these changes have been stressful
for many of the VA/medical school affiliations. Our challenge is to u
nderstand and manage these changes so that the many benefits that have
derived from more than fifty years of VA/medical school affiliations
can be retained.