TPMCafe
« Women As The Goalies | Home | Food For Thought »

President Obama Fulfills Two Critical Campaign Promises to Vets

user-pic
"[At Walter Reed,] life beyond the hospital bed is a frustrating mountain of paperwork. The typical soldier is required to file 22 documents with eight different commands -- most of them off-post -- to enter and exit the medical processing world, according to government investigators. Sixteen different information systems are used to process the forms, but few of them can communicate with one another.

The disappearance of necessary forms and records is the most common reason soldiers languish at Walter Reed longer than they should, according to soldiers, family members and staffers. Sometimes the Army has no record that a soldier even served in Iraq. A combat medic who did three tours had to bring in letters and photos of herself in Iraq to show she that had been there, after a clerk couldn't find a record of her service."

- The Washington Post

When the Walter Reed scandal broke in February 2007 spurring a massive public outcry, the politicians in Washington said heads would roll. But silently, and more than two years later, our seriously wounded troops continue to fall through the cracks, suffering through redundant tests, misdiagnoses, and delayed treatment all because of lost medical records.

But their saga doesn't end there. When these troops transition from the military to the VA healthcare systems, medical records and military service records regularly get lost in the shuffle, leading to long waits for disability benefits and a drop-off in the quality of care.

Our nation's heroes deserve much more than lost paperwork and endless delays.

Today, we are finally turning the page on this horrific chapter in our nation's history. President Obama has announced an overhaul of military and VA recordkeeping that will help ease the transition home for our veterans. IAVA was there at the White House for this historic announcement along with every major veterans' group.

This announcement marks the beginning of a new era of collaboration and cooperation between the Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs. It was encouraging to see Secretary Gates and Secretary Shinseki stand behind President Obama during his speech, as they must work closely to implement this important change.

The Joint Virtual Lifetime Electronic Record Initiative will require DOD and VA administrative and medical records to finally be electronic and transferable. Not only will it help simplify the transition from the DOD to the VA, it will improve care for all veterans, especially the more than 33,000 wounded troops from Iraq and Afghanistan. With this initiative, President Obama is finally bringing the VA and DOD into the 21st century.

Today, the President also reiterated his support for advance funding of VA healthcare. For nineteen of the last twenty-two years the VA budget has been passed late, forcing the largest healthcare provider in the nation to ration care. Imagine trying to plan for next month's bills without knowing your next paycheck. That's what we ask veterans' hospitals to do almost every year. Advance funding will ensure that the quality of care for veterans will no longer be compromised by budget delays. With the strong support of the President and bipartisan leadership in Congress, advance funding can and must move forward this year.

Today, President Obama has taken action on two key campaign promises to America's veterans--and two of IAVA's top legislative priorities for 2009. Advance funding VA healthcare and an overhaul of military and VA recordkeeping will eliminate two of the most significant bureaucratic hurdles that keep veterans from the healthcare and benefits they have earned. Veterans nationwide applaud the Administration for making veterans and their families a priority. And we look forward to continuing to work together on the many other issues facing today's veterans, including psychological injuries, unemployment and homelessness.

Paul Rieckhoff is the Executive Director and Founder of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA). A non-profit and nonpartisan organization, IAVA is the nation's first and largest group for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, representing more than 100,000 veteran members and civilian supporters in all 50 states. Rieckhoff served as a First Lieutenant and infantry rifle platoon leader in the Iraq war from 2003-2004. He is now a nationally recognized authority on the war in Iraq and issues affecting troops, military families and veterans.


6 Comments

| Leave a comment
user-pic

republican hypocrisy was always at its worst for me when they tried to paint Democrats as not supporting the troops. All that time they were killing our boys with poor equipment and inadequate health care. Thank heavens that is changing.

user-pic

Thank you for this post.

user-pic

Thanks for letting us know.

user-pic

Paul,

Thanks for all your tremendous and effective work!

I have a question that isn't directly on this subject. Why don't we hear more from the veterans groups these days about actually getting the US out of that idiotic war in Iraq? The war isn't any better an idea now that we have improved the administration in DC and the administration plans essentially to make the occupation permanent albeit with a smaller force. Why don't we hear more about getting us the hell out of there so we stop making more wounded and traumatized vets?

user-pic

Paul: Thanks for posting this. This idea--that DoD and VA need to make a seamless transition for personnel moving from the MHS to the VA healthcare system--has been percolating for a long time, with lots of pushback from DoD. Everyone knew it would take committed leadership to make it happen. Now the leadership has to start turning the screws further down the ranks. In my view, VA has moved harder on this than DoD. Nice to see them standing together in public. We need to keep the heat on.

user-pic

Thank you Paul for this post and especially for your leadership in helping veterans. I have a concern about the computerized records, though.

One of the times I took my Vietnam-veteran friend to the emergency room of the Little Rock VA, the computers were down. They had him rate his pain (a 10, unheard of for him) and asked if he'd thought about harming himself or someone else. He said he'd thought of killing himself the night before because of the pain. They took a chest x-ray. After that, we sat in the waiting room for seven hours, even after all he told them.

Why? The computers were down. There MUST be a back-up system for those occasions. Period. Lives are at stake, and people are suffering horribly. There MUST be a back-up system BEFORE veterans rely on anything electronic.

I hope your group will make this a pre-requisite for these electronic records. Please.

PS When I found out what the delay was, I reminded them of the chest x-ray. He had severe pneumonia and was admitted immediately and treated. Had we waited for the computer, he might have died that day.

Leave a comment

Advertisement
Please disable your adblocker!
Ads are how we pay the bills!

Subscribe

The Coffee House
TPMCafe's regulars

House Brew
From Your Cafe Editor

Special Guests
Big names and big brains

Special Features
Pressing topics and trends

Table for One
An expert's week-long talk.

All Reader Posts
TPM readers discuss.

Book Club Calendar

Coming Soon



Nov. 30-Dec. 4



January 12-16



« Book Club ArchiveFull calendar »

Recent Reader Posts

All Reader Posts »





Masthead

Editor-in-Chief
Josh Marshall

Site Editor
Lila Shapiro

Intern
Versha Sharma



Subscribe to TPMCafe's feed.
Subscribe to TPMCafe's reader blog feed.

Advertise Liberally
Share
Close Social Web Email

"To" Email Address

Your Name

Your Email Address