| Veterans
News Flash 
Panel
Urges More Benefits for Veterans
By HOPE YEN, Associated Press Writer
Wed Oct 3
WASHINGTON - Veterans
disability payments should be increased immediately
by up to 25 percent as part of a sweeping overhaul
designed to compensate for a wounded warrior's
lost "quality of life," a
special commission recommended Wednesday.
The 2 1/2-year study released by the Veterans'
Disability Benefits Commission offers the most
comprehensive look yet at the ailing government
benefits system that provides millions of injured
Veterans with a total of about $30 billion a year
in payments.
Tracking the findings of recent reports that detailed
flaws in Veterans care, the 13-member congressional
commission concluded in its 544-page report that
both the Defense and Veterans Affairs departments
fall woefully short in providing adequate mental
health care as well as timely and fair disability
payments.
But going a step further, the commission also
recommended immediate extra payments to injured
Veterans, many of whom feel they lose out on benefits
because of an overly narrow government focus on
earnings losses or other reasons.
That could offer Veterans some stopgap relief
as the Bush administration and Congress consider
proposals from an array of task forces and commissions
aimed at fixing an outdated system that critics
have long said was broken. Such changes could take
into account new medical therapies, prosthetics
and other effects of war injuries on the daily
functioning of wounded warriors.
"Congress should increase the compensation
rates up to 25 percent as an interim and baseline
future benefit for loss of quality of life, pending
development and implementation of quality of life
measures," the report states. "In particular,
the measure should take into account the quality
of life and other non-work related effects of severe
disabilities on Veterans and family members."
In an interview with The Associated Press, retired
Lt. Gen. James Terry Scott, the commission's chairman,
said the disability system must be revamped, saying
the Army might be trying to lowball Veterans' disability
ratings to avoid paying more benefits.
A key commission recommendation seeks to bring
more fairness to the government system by shifting
more responsibility for assigning benefits from
the Pentagon to the VA, which tends to rate disabilities
higher, even if it ran the risk of putting more
strains on an already backlogged VA.
Scott cited a Pentagon policy established in the
mid-1980s at a time of budget restraint that calls
for consideration of only one disability when determining
benefits, not multiple ones as the VA does.
That policy remains
in place today, creating a climate in which Army
officials might consider — at
least subconsciously — cost-saving factors
when awarding benefits, he 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," Scott said. "But
what we're hoping is that the Congress carefully
looks at all 113."
Among the findings:
_Veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder
are in danger of slipping through the cracks because
there is little coordination among agencies to
ensure they get all the services they need, from
medical treatment to proper compensation and vocational
rehabilitation so they can return to work.
_After initial screenings, the VA often does not
follow up soon enough with re-examinations of Veterans
with suspected PTSD. The report blamed in part
the VA's struggles to reduce its backlog of disability
claims, which it said was diverting the agency's
attention and resources away from needed PTSD care.
The commission called for mandatory re-examinations
for PTSD to gauge treatment and other issues every
two to three years.
_Benefits should be awarded to Veterans for any
service-related injury, regardless of whether it
was incurred during combat.
_The VA must make better use of technology to
reduce its overwhelming delay of 177 days, on average,
in distributing disability payments.
Sen. Daniel Akaka, D-Hawaii, who chairs the Senate
Veterans Affairs Committee, said his panel will
closely review the recommendations in coming weeks.
"Many of these changes may prove costly," he
said. "However, as I have stated time and
time again, caring for Veterans must be viewed
as a continuing cost of war."
Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash.,
agreed. "I am
especially concerned about Veterans who have suffered
from the unseen wounds of war — TBI and PTSD — who
may be rated incorrectly," she said. "This
report indicates that we still have a lot of work
ahead of us to go back and capture those people
and make sure that they are rated accurately."
The commission report comes after the Government
Accountability Office last week found that the
Bush administration has yet to find clear answers
to some of the worst problems afflicting wounded
warriors, such as personalized medical care and
reducing backlogs in disability pay.
"VA appreciates the efforts of the recent
commissions created to find ways to improve the
disability benefits process for eligible Veterans," VA
spokesman Matt Smith said in response to the report. "Our
goal is to help our disabled Veterans become whole
and continue their lives by providing them with
health care, rehabilitation, as well as disability,
education, and home loan benefits."
SOURCE:
Yahoo News
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