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Seriously injured military personnel returning from Iraq and Afghanistan will get speedier medical treatment and quicker enrollment in Veterans Affairs benefits under changes proposed by a presidential commission report released Tuesday.

Veterans Affairs Secretary James Nicholson outlined measures proposed by the task force President Bush chose him to lead in response to news reports that some returning troops were housed for long periods in poor conditions at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

Charged with recommending changes that could be made without legislation or more funding, Nicholson's panel suggested 25 improvements. Another presidential panel headed by former Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., and former Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala has been asked for long-range changes.


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"We are going to accelerate the treatment of different categories of people who are coming back from the war," Nicholson said at the National Press Club.

Walter Reed has "medical care that is first-rate," Nicholson said, but some returning troops were put on medical hold while authorities determined "whether they were fit or unfit to stay on active duty."

"Now we will screen any patient who comes in to see if they have a form of brain injury," Nicholson said, injuries that are common because of "percussive blasts that are so frequent" in Iraq.

If someone is determined unfit, under the commission's plan he or she would immediately be transferred to the VA, which "will really speed up the process," Nicholson said. He said he wants to simplify the process for enrolling in VA programs by putting the process on line and "cutting through red tape that has been in the way."

COMMENTS

  • I served three tours in Vietnam, took three hits (no record of Purple Hearts earned on my DD14, and yet today, still have had no professional care for PTSD. I have been going to my local VET Center. My new wife is scared of my abrupt temper changes. Why is it that the newest group of veterans are receiving 100% disability while I have been trying for over seven years?
  • It's all about leadership -- VA has never had good leadership.
  • I'll believe it when I see it happen. I have seen so many previous initiatives in the VA that floundered because of the bureacracy. I have seen a grand new VA hospital constructed in the past that was badly managed. I have seen VA clinics that that treat injured veterans more like animals than people. For years, veterans have been unable to get enough care because there never seems to be enough money to pay for it. What does it take for our leaders to realize that knee jerk reactions to public outrage isn't enough. The system is just plain broken. It must be repaired from the top of the chain of command to the lowest worker.