Report Recommends Increased Disability Benefits For Veterans
Main Category: Veterans / Ex-ServicemenAlso Included In: Rehabilitation / Physical Therapy; Eye Health / Blindness
Article Date: 05 Oct 2007 - 12:00 PDT
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The 13-member Veterans' Disability Benefits Commission on Wednesday released a report that recommended as much as a 25% increase in disability benefits for veterans as compensation for lost "quality of life," the AP/Boston Herald reports. The 544-page report, based on a 2.5-year study, included 113 recommendations to improve the disability benefits system for veterans.
According to the report, the Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs have not provided veterans with adequate disability benefits or mental health care. The report found that veterans who have post-traumatic stress disorder might not receive adequate care because of a lack of coordination among federal agencies and that VA often does not re-examine veterans who might have PTSD, in part because of efforts to reduce a backlog of disability claims.
Recommendations
According to the report, "Congress should increase the compensation rates up to 25% as an interim and baseline future benefit for loss of quality of life, pending development and implementation of quality of life measures. In particular, the measure should take into account the quality of life and other nonwork-related effects of severe disabilities on veterans and family members."
The report recommended a shift in responsibility for assignment of disability benefits to VA, which in many cases rates disabilities higher. The report also recommended that VA expand use of technology to reduce the average delay of 177 days for distribution of disability benefits to veterans and that veterans receive benefits for all service-related injuries, regardless of whether they occurred during combat. In addition, the report recommended mandatory re-examinations every two to three years for veterans who might have PTSD (AP/Boston Herald, 10/3). The report called for the establishment of an "executive oversight group" to implement the recommendations (Yoest, CQ Today, 10/3).
Retired Army Lt. Gen. James Terry Scott, chair of the commission, said, "We have come up with 113 recommendations -- some of them are cheap. Some are easy. Some are extremely hard and complex. Some of them, there is a significant bill attached to it. But what we're hoping is that the Congress carefully looks at all 113." Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee Chair Daniel Akaka (D-Hawaii) said that the committee will review the recommendations in the next few weeks (AP/Boston Herald, 10/3). Senate aides said that implementation of the recommendations might cost as much as hundreds of billions of dollars over the next 10 years (CQ Today, 10/3).
Eye Injuries
In related news, several lawmakers have introduced a bipartisan bill (HR 3558) that would provide $5 million to establish a DOD center for research and treatment of eye injuries among veterans, USA Today reports. In addition, the legislation would establish a database to help track treatment of veterans who experience eye injuries to provide military physicians and VA with their complete medical histories. According to the Army, at least 1,126 veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have experienced eye injuries that require surgery, and half of those veterans experienced temporary blindness in at least one eye.
Eye injuries account for 10.7% to 13% of all serious wounds among veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that require evacuation from combat, according to current and former Army ophthalmologists. Thomas Zampieri -- director of government relations for the Blinded Veterans Association, who plans to testify on Thursday at a House Veterans' Affairs Committee hearing -- said, "It still is hard for us to understand how such a significant injury as combat eye wounds could have been below everyone's radar screen for four years of war" (Zoroya, USA Today, 10/4).
Broadcast Coverage
NPR's "All Things Considered" on Wednesday reported on the report. The segment includes comments from Joe Violante, national legislative director for Disabled American Veterans, and Scott (Shapiro, "All Things Considered," NPR, 10/3). Audio of the segment is available online.
Reprinted with kind permission from http://www.kaisernetwork.org. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for email delivery at http://www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/healthpolicy. The Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report is published for kaisernetwork.org, a free service of The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation© 2005 Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.
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MLA
14 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/84661.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/84661.php.
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Increased Disability Benefits For Veterans
posted by Charles G. Freeman on 8 Oct 2007 at 8:03 pmThe article was informative and brings hope for veterans like myself. I have been diagnoised repeatedly with PTSD by the VA as far back as 1997. However, the Ramsey County Mental Health Department in St. Paul, Mn diagnoised me with PTSD and Dissociative Disorder as far back as 1992. The problem I face today is helping the VA see/understand the totallity of this crippling mental health disability. It seems that the VA is far too quick to label we veterans with a form of schizopherenia, that way they can give medication and little else. My most recent independent diagnois, 2004/5, by a recognized psychologist specializing in the field of dissociative disorders was disregarded by my than psychatric team at the St. Cloud, Mn VA Hospital. I feel that the VA Staff should have openly invited Dr. Suzanne James' diagnois and found a way for me to receive treatment by Dr. James. No, instead some nurse practicioner by the name of Bruce Miller refuted the ligitamate findings of a Dr. who specializes in the field. Furthermore, somehow, somewhere the Military and/or the VA Administration lost not only my medical records, but also my dental records therein making it darn near impossible to prove my hepititist, knee injuries, TBI, dental trauma, lung condition caused by exposure to chemicals, shoulder damages. The compensation I receive today is for MST/PTSD/Cognitive disorder caused by TBI. After my living expenses, for both wife and I there is not enough left for specialized treatment for the Dissociative Disorder in the private sector. As it stands the VA is suppose to vendor out treatment care if they have not the fracilities or necessary specialist to treat we veterans. The fee base program may well work for others, but I have yet to meet another veteran who is receiveing fee bases for anything. I should be afforded the right to fair treatment that may give me a 50% chance of a better life. Any help or insight as to how I can get this help would be very appreciated.
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