Patient Advocacy Now

Systems Insider to Board-Certified Advocate: Veterans, Mental Health, and Real-World Care

Greater National Advocates Season 3 Episode 14

Rachel J Nash traces her journey from rehabilitation counseling roles inside large systems (state vocational services, VA, Medicaid social work) to launching a private advocacy practice anchored in ethics, transparency, and patient empowerment. She explains why board certification matters to her—adherence to a code of ethics, continuing education, and clear boundaries such as not serving as a client’s POA—and how her work today focuses on adults, especially veterans and civilians with complex, long-ignored issues. Rachel demystifies VA basics like what a 10% service-connected disability rating enables, why continuity of care and accurate documentation strengthen claims, and how presumptive exposures (e.g., Agent Orange, burn pits) can link later conditions to service. She dives into mental health advocacy, candidly noting her own bipolar diagnosis and using it to frame a practical “cake” model where medication and therapy are only two ingredients alongside sleep, movement, relationships, purpose, and faith. She calls the mental health system the hardest to navigate due to stigma, overmedication, rushed visits, poor follow-through, and scarce beds or step-down programs; her counter is meticulous preparation, written timelines, and modeling collaborative, respectful communication in the exam room. Boots on the ground in the Carolinas, Rachel attends appointments, coordinates across providers and insurers, and insists on clients having “skin in the game” as true partners. Her one big system wish: more doctors with time and latitude to practice real medicine.

Resources Mentioned:
nashadvocacy@gmail.com
704-254-1407
https://www.va.gov
https://www.pacboard.org