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THE PEAKE PAPERS -- VA Secretary nominee Dr. James Peake's
pre-hearing responses to questions posed by the
Senate
Committee on Veterans' Affairs. But, who actually
wrote
the 28 pages of carefully-crafted answers?

Dr. James Peake, the current nominee for VA
Secretary, had his confirmation hearing before the Senate Committee on
Veterans' Affairs on December 5, 2007. Story with backlinks here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/07/nf07/nfDEC07/nf120607-3.htm
From the beginning, Peake has been carefully
packaged by the White House. Article on "Packaging Peake" here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/07/nf07/nfDEC07/nf121007-1.htm
Now, we have the questions the Committee
submitted to Dr. Peake prior to the confirmation hearing...and Dr. Peake's
answers.
The 28 pages show a couple of interesting things.
First, Peake most certainly didn't write these responses. The
answers are carefully-crafted public relations statements written by his
"packagers." Second, the Committee, already knowing the questions
and the answers, stuck to the script and gave Peake a "pass" at the
hearing.
Basically, Peake and his "packagers" gave the
Committee the answers they wanted to hear.
All the questions and answers are printed below
without any edits.
For more about Dr. James Peake use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.y
ourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=peake&op=and
Questions and answers below:
-------------------------
To: Committee on Veterans' Affairs United States
Senate
Attn: Kelly Fado, Chief Clerk
Subject: Response, Pre-Hearing Questions for Nominee, Dr. Peake
1. What do you believe are the most important
problems and challenges currently confronting VA? In the next year, which
of these problems and challenges will you focus on and how do you intend
to address them?
Response:
Problems & Challenges:
• Transition: The transition from active duty
service member to veteran of our current generation of returning, combat
experienced, men and women is an important current challenge. The
challenge is broader than just those with severe injuries found unfit for
service. We must be proactive for those who need support from the VA in
readjustment to and reintegrating in civilian life. We must anticipate and
prepare for the fact that some of these Veterans who initially did not
recognize or claim a disability will have legitimate claims that require
timely and accurate adjudication
• Mental Health / Traumatic Brain Injury: Understanding, appreciating, and
intervening appropriately for those with mental health issues,
particularly PTSD: and understanding the relation of the spectrum of
Traumatic Brain Injuries and levels of associated impairment will be both
a short and long term issue for this newest generation of Veterans.
• Access to Care: Insuring access to care with compassion, timeliness,
quality, and without hassle whether our Veterans live metropolitan areas
or in the rural areas of our country.
• Backlog of Claims: Addressing the time required to execute the claims
process to provide benefits, through reproducible, thorough and accurate
ratings.
Approaches to address these issues:
• Creating clear expectations within the VA as to standards, attitudes,
and Veteran focus supported by an investment in training.
• Crossing the information and cultural gaps and barriers with DoD.
• Measuring the outcomes against standards and a culture of
accountability.
• Process analysis and re-engineering supported
by information technology I automation tools.
Article continues below:
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2. Some believe the Secretary of Veterans Affairs
should he an independent advocate, for veterans, others, that the
Secretary should be the executor of the Administration's policies relating
to Veterans. What is your view of the appropriate role of the Secretary of
Veterans Affairs?
Response: As a member of the President's cabinet, I appreciate that I am a
part of the administration. But, I believe I am in the administration with
the responsibility to not only advocate for Veterans, but to insure that
our Veterans receive the best of care; that they have their benefits
provided in a timely fashion, and that the many programs that serve them
produce the outcomes that make a positive difference in their lives. I
recognize that this means appropriately forecasting the needs and
advocating for the funds to meet those needs while making sure that the
funds provided arc well used.
3. What do you believe are the differences and challenges in heading a
civilian department versus a military organization? As a result of any
differences, do you anticipate that you will have to alter or modify your
leadership style?
Response:
Within the departments, there are more similarities than differences,
i.e., a highly skilled work force, men and women who care deeply about the
mission, many of whom have had long careers in the department. The
civilian component of the DoD is larger than some might realize. In fact,
50% of the US Army Medical Command work force was made up of civilians
during my tenure. The span of control with the VA is more diffuse than the
military; the locations within the VA are relatively fixed compared to the
deployable assets and characteristics of the military. Another difference
is in the nature of our VA beneficiaries, spread throughout the land where
advocacy groups have become partners in the delivery of services as well
as within the department and with congress in the shaping of these
services.
I do not anticipate a fundamental difference in my leadership style which
I would characterize as integrity based, mission focused and recognizing
that the only way to succeed is through the men and women at every level
who do the real work of the organization. To accomplish this I will make
focused efforts on communication to insure clarity of intent; to insure
that those men and women know that I value them and count on them; and to
let them get to know me. In the Army I had the advantage of having been a
general officer for 8 years before I became the Surgeon General and was
known. Though many in the VA do know me, it is not at the same level. I
will similarly need to reach out to and communicate with the VA's
partners, the VSO's; to this committee, and to those on the House side if
I am to be an effective leader for the VA and for Veterans' issues.
4. How have your previous experiences prepared
you for heading the second largest federal department? What lessons did
you learn as Army Surgeon General that you plan to apply to leading the
VA?
Response: I believe that there are several areas of my experience that are
relevant:
Because of the mission of the Department of Veterans Affairs - Caring for
those who have borne the battle ... and their widows and orphans - I do
believe my 38+ years in the Army, with service in the line as an infantry
officer and in medicine as a physician, 38 years of taking care of
Soldiers, provides a personal background of caring, understanding and
empathy that will keep my decisions true to the mission.
My management experience includes 10 years as a colonel with executive
responsibility in medical teaching centers, in command of the Army medical
forces in Korea, and as the Chief Consultant to the Surgeon General during
Desert Shield and Storm. This was followed by 12 years as a general
officer in command of progressively larger and more complex organizations
with subordinate units geographically dispersed and with, particularly in
my four years as Surgeon General, the important, direct interface with
Congress, the joint and interagency community, and the Army staff. The
lessons that I have learned in this journey, not just as the Surgeon
General, are the importance of data driven decisions, measurement of
outcomes and the notion that if something is measurable it can be
improved: and that this approach supports a culture of accountability.
Leadership of units from a platoon in combat, to a team around an
operating room table, to a department of surgical specialists many more
senior than I, to the combat medical units of the XVIII Airborne Corps
with active and reserve units up and down the east coast, to leading more
than 50 thousand men and women of 11 major subordinate commands is
valuable and relevant experience that that has emphasized the importance
of listening, of valuing people, and of communicating while maintaining a
clear focus on the mission. Visibility and accessibility are important as
a leader. I believe my progression over the spectrum of leadership
described provides a foundation to apply this experience to the much
larger VA.
5. What is your management style? Are you a "hands-on manager"? Do you
rely on significant delegation? Do you seek to achieve consensus with
those on your management team after making a decision or do you generally
gather relevant information and input, and then make a decision?
Response: The only way one can get anything accomplished in an
organization much larger than even an infantry company, let alone an
organization the size of the VA, is through delegation. But, with the
delegation must come accountability supported by data. I do my homework on
issues and ask questions to understand the issues. In that sense, I am a
hands on manager. As the "intent" of policy is communicated, my
expectation is that those many operational decisions made at levels below
the Secretary are made consistent with that "intent". In decision making,
I welcome all input, encourage the dissenting view, and seek outside
critical thinking. I am always impressed that a product can he made
better. However, with that input, I will make decisions with or without
consensus. As a corollary, when there is not full consensus, I recognize
my increased obligation to communicate my rationale; engaging and seeing
the decision to success (ownership); and in changing course if I am wrong.
If confirmed, do you expect to visit various VA facilities in order to
accurately capture what is occurring in the field?
Response: I look forward to visiting the facilities, meeting with the men
and women of the VA and finding the venues to meet with those we serve. My
Army experience supports the importance of "visiting the troops" in the
field as well as "walking around" ones own headquarters.
6. As I am sure you are aware, many veterans have raised concerns about
your coming to VA from QTC, a private sector firm that has significant
business relationship with the Department.
Two Questions - -
• What will you do as Secretary to ensure that
you have no dealings whatsoever with QTC or with any efforts on QTC's part
to continue or expand the company's dealing with VA or on any other
matters involving QTC and VA?
Response: If confirmed, I will terminate any connection with QTC, will
have no ongoing or residual financial interest in QTC, and will recuse
myself in any matters related to QTC.
• What Plans do you have with respect to QTC when
you leave the position of Secretary? Do you expect to return to the. firm?
Response: I have no plans to return to QTC, if confirmed; and, more
specifically, I will not do so.
7. Secretary Nicholson was accused, rightly or wrongly, of being out of
touch with the needs of Veterans. Are you satisfied that you are attuned
to the needs of America's veterans? If not, how do you plan to improve
your understanding (of the needs of America's veterans?
Response: My whole life has been with soldiers. My mother was an Army
Nurse, my father a Medical Service Corps officer. Those who came over to
our house included active duty career officers and their families and
those who had worked for or with my father but who were out of the Army,
sergeants, privates, officers alike. Many of those had served in WWII and
in Korea. As a surgeon throughout the 70's and 80's I had the great
privilege of taking care of many in that last "Greatest Generation" who
were dual eligible for DoD and VA care. As a commander myself, I know the
faces of soldiers and their families and have dealt with their needs. As a
medical commander, I've been involved with the medical and family needs of
those injured. As the Chief Medical Director of QTC, I talked with
Veterans in our facilities or on the phone and dealt with their C&P
examination issues.
Though I do have what I believe is a solid understanding and empathy for
our Veterans, I know that I will gain an even better perspective, should I
be confirmed, as I proactively engage Veterans Organizations, our own
dedicated work force, and the Veterans themselves who seek the spectrum of
VA services.
8. If you were able to have a one-on-one meeting with every VA employee,
what would. you say? If confirmed as Secretary, how will you implement
this message in terms of policies and actions?
Response: First, I would tell them how privileged I feel to be joining
their team; that I believe deeply in the mission; and that I believe in
them. I would want them to know of my background both in the military and
in regards to my rather long association with the VA through the Special
Medical Advisory Group; through working for the last year with the VBA;
and even with my experience with a VA Cemetery as the commanding general
at FT Sam Houston. I would talk about our opportunity to look to the
future of this next generation of combat veterans returning from Iraq and
Afghanistan, getting it right for them and their families while
simultaneously honoring our commitment to the WWII & Korea generation and
addressing the men and women of the Vietnam era, my generation, who are
now finding more need for our services. I will commit to each of them, my
dedication to the mission, to them, and to creating the environment for
their success as, together, we serve the needs of Veterans and their
families.
I will use the chain of command, all of the command information channels
available and will find the personal venues to deliver this message.
Policies and actions will be consistent with this message.
9. How many staff do you plan to bring with you to VA? Do you anticipate
asking the White House to allow you to replace any political appointees,
including any confirmed by the Senate?
Response: I am impressed with the quality of the VA senior leadership. I
have no preconceived plan to replace any political appointees and have not
been in a position to assess the need to bring in additional staff. 1 am
aware of the potential for an Assistant Secretary for Acquisition and look
forward to the support of this committee in moving forward with that
position.
10. The President noted in his introduction that you are the first
physician and first general to serve as Secretary. While he was certainly
correct about your credentials compared with prior Secretaries, there have
been other generals, including perhaps the most famous of all, Omar
Bradley, who headed the VA before it became a cabinet department in 1989.
It is correct, however, that you are the first physician to head either
the Veterans Administration or the Department of Veterans affairs, and I
think that there may be at least one compelling reason why a physician has
not previously been picked for the job, namely, the potential conflict
between the Secretary and the Under Secretary for Health, relating to VA's
health care mission.
By law, the Under Secretary is a health care professional responsible to
the Secretary for "the operation of the Veterans Health Administration. "
The Secretary, on the other hand, is responsible for "the control,
direction, and management of the Department. " This difference suggests
that the Under Secretary for Health, like the two other Under Secretaries
with respect to their Administrations, is expected to exercise direct
operation control of VHA and that the Secretary's role is to supervise the
Under Secretary but not to be directly involved in the operation of the
VHA.
If confirmed, how do you anticipate working with Dr Kussman or whomever is
the Under Secretary for Health to ensure that this division of
responsibility is recognized and honored.
Response: The VA is extremely fortunate to have Dr Kussman as the Under
Secretary for Health, its "Top Doc". He has assembled a very talented team
of professionals. If confirmed, I will seek to complement Dr. Kussman's
efforts and initiatives in leading his administration, not to compete.
With my medical background, I anticipate being able to more quickly make
the decisions that he might bring to me since I do not anticipate needing
"Medicine 101". As I execute my responsibilities as Secretary, I would
anticipate that my guidance to him will be well informed because of my
medical background and my military background. If anything, I anticipate a
greater synergy supported by our common medical background and our long
association.
I would note also that Dr Kussman, Under Secretary Cooper, and I all share
the background of being flag officers. Again, common backgrounds offer
synergy rather than competition for authority.
11. Please describe how you intend to work with the Deputy Secretary. Will
the Deputy Secretary he VA's Chief Operating Officer?
Response: Gordon Mansfield is one of my heroes. I am delighted that he
will continue as the Deputy Secretary. He will continue as the VA's Chief
Operating Officer.
12. Please describe how you intend to work with the General Counsel. Will
the General Counsel be a key member of your management team?
Response: The General Counsel will be a key member of the management team.
Ethical and Legal behavior arc the hallmarks of a quality organization.
The General Counsel is a major compass in this regard as well as one who
will provide the detailed advice on specific policies, legislation, and
initiatives. The General Counsel will have open-door access to me to
ensure the communication necessary to provide that advice.
13. Please describe how you intend to work with
the Inspector General. Are you comfortable with the IG's dual
responsibility, to the Secretary as the head of the Department, and to the
Congress?
Response: I understand the Inspector General function from my military
experience, appreciate their uniquely privileged role, and am comfortable
with that role. The IG can be a very powerful force in maintaining the VA
as a learning organization, identifying systemic issues that we can fix
internally or acquire the support to fix externally. Their work will not
sit on the shelf, but will be used to make us better.
14. Please describe how You intend to work with the three Under
Secretaries and with the Assistant Secretaries.
Response: We will, on a regular basis, meet as a group; we will have
dedicated one-on-one time. The Under Secretaries have unique
responsibilities to exercise direct operation control of their respective
administrations and the Secretary's role is to supervise the Under
Secretaries. I owe them guidance, objectives, and resourcing with the
support of all of the assistant secretaries will be dedicated to their
success.
15. Are you satisfied with the current alignment of Assistant Secretaries
or do you anticipate proposing any changes to the number of Assistant
Secretaries or to their responsibilities?
Response: The addition of a proposed Assistant Secretary for Acquisition
is the only Assistant Secretarial position change of which I am currently
aware. I do not have any preconceived notion of other changes that might
be required.
16. How do you plan to work with the veteran service organizations? Do you
anticipate meeting with VSO representatives on a regular basis?
Response: I appreciate the unique roles of the Veterans Service
Organizations and the Military Service Organizations and will work
collaboratively with them as we develop policy, as we seek insights from
their members, as we work with them as partners in the service delivery. I
look forward to meeting with them on a regular basis.
17. What are your views on the situation that was described in the media
reports earlier this year about Walter Reed Army Medical Center and on
earlier problems with the Medical holdover detachments at Ft Stewart and
Ft Knox? In hindsight, what might you have done as Army Surgeon General to
prevent or mitigate the problems that surfaced at Walter Reed, Ft Stewart,
and Ft Knox?
Response: Regarding the Walter Reed issues, I do not have first hand
knowledge of the details having retired in 2004. However, it is
unacceptable for soldiers to be housed in inadequate barracks. What was
reported as a lack of caring for those wounded warriors who moved to
outpatient status was disturbing as was the failure to bring these issues
through the chain of command. I know that the Army has responded with a
concerted effort to reestablish appropriate chain of command and
accountability for those soldiers remaining at Walter Reed in an
outpatient status and keeping them focused on their individual mission of
medical improvement and rehabilitation. I also believe a valuable service
was done in highlighting the convoluted and complex nature of the DoD
Physical disability system, the overlap of the VA disability system, and
the need, as highlighted by every group who has examined this recently,
for revision, simplification, and modernization to accommodate for medical
and societal changes. I was gratified to read, though often as an add-on
comment, the recognition of the very high quality of inpatient care, of
the amazing success in bringing soldiers home from the battlefield when,
in prior conflicts they would have died.
Regarding the FT Stewart issue of medical hold-over care, I was intimately
engaged. The situation that the press highlighted included inadequate
barracks, slow processing times, and medical resources that were not
adequate to meet the demand. The majority soldiers who had reported to a
mobilization site medically unfit. Others had suffered some condition in
their train-up that made them non-deployable. The first group was large
and a result of policy (changed as a result of this experience) that kept
soldiers who reported unfit to mobilization sites on active duty for
medical board disposition. I had not anticipated this category of soldiers
to be large and had not expanded capacity to meet the demand.
My response: Within 24 hours of becoming aware of this issue I dispatched
a general officer led team to meet individually with each of the 500
Soldiers at Ft Stewart. Questionnaires were used to collect and categorize
their issues. The team also met with leaders on the installation; Division
Commander, garrison commander, and other key leaders. I coordinated with
the Army staff and other Army leaders to have their subject matter experts
available to assist this team to resolve those issues outside of the
medical arena. In addition to FT Knox, the team followed the trip to
Stewart with trips to Ft Benning, and Ft Campbell, again meeting with
Soldiers at each installation and their family members as well. Assessing
the teams input, we immediately looked at policy issues that needing
changing, new ones that should be instituted, or resource related issues
of more people, equipment or facilities. Immediate changes reduced the
normal TRICARE access to care standards for appointments; for MRIs and
other diagnostic imaging procedures, and for surgical procedures. I pushed
greater use of the community assets (purchased care) while at the same
time bringing in VA, public health service staff and borrowed staff from
other Army locations. I worked with Army leadership to approve
mobilization of additional personnel in anticipation of increased numbers
of injured/wounded Soldiers returning from both Iraq and Afghanistan and
justified additional funds for contract providers, physical disability
advisors and other support staff. We reduced the ratio of case managers to
patients, the ratio of soldiers to disability benefit advisors, and
ensured that hospitals assign primary care physicians who would directly
oversee this population of patients. I approved the establishment of a
unique contract that would allow quick access to healthcare professionals
to include mental health specialists.
Strict reporting requirements were enacted for
the medical facilities and they were held accountable to the new
standards. The medical holdover population was modeled and forecasts
allowed resource distribution and monitoring of our progress in resolving
the needs of this population of Soldiers.
Each Soldier was mandated to have a case manager to stay with the Soldier
through their hand off with the VA. I supported the development of the
Community Based Healthcare Organization medical concept of operation. This
initiative continues allowing Soldiers to return home and receive their
care locally but under the management of the Community Based organization
with National Guard leadership.
Prior to this and before the war, the issue of the disability system was
on my scope. I had insisted that "The Compassionate And Efficient
Disposition Of The Unfit Soldier" be placed as a key performance process
on the Balanced Score Card Strategy Map for the United States Army Medical
Command. In hindsight I could have recognized that the peacetime
processing standards (a problem already) were inadequate to support a
surge that potentially would come of wartime. I might have anticipated the
impact of the flawed policy regarding the retention of soldiers unfit at
the time of mobilization and fought harder to change it prospectively. I
might have worked harder to create the imperative to reengineer the
disability system. Though I was one of the outspoken champions of DoD/VA
sharing, I could have pushed harder for advances that were more aggressive
than the 50 VA caseworkers that we welcomed into Army hospitals or been
more aggressive in staff sharing beyond the 4 cardiac surgeons that I
detailed to the VA.
18. What difficulties confronting wounded, injured and ill service members
transitioning from the military to the VA health care systems are the
result of DoD policies and practices? Of VA policies and practices? Of
some combination?
Response: If confirmed, I look forward to detailed briefings on the
current status of policies and practices and the result of pilot programs
that, I understand, are ongoing. Already addressed, as I understand from
what I have read and in general discussion, are the establishment of
specific standards for living quarters for wounded warriors, an expanded
and aggressive case management approach; a strengthening of the chain of
command for care and oversight of the wounded warrior; the beginning
stages of the recovery coordinators as suggested in the Dole-Shalala
report; information exchange as wounded warriors are moved into VA
facilities for the next stages of their care. Each of these was an area
that needed strengthening and focus. The VA has moved to expand the
polytrauma capability with an additional polytrauma center planned as well
as polytrauma expertise identified within each VISN. I am told that VA has
pushed the limits of their authority to provide medical support to family
members who are supporting their wounded warriors. The pilot program in
the national capital region that began in November will provide lessons in
the single physical and VA rating for Medical Evaluation Boarded service
members. The incentive for the service member to move from one system to
the other... or rather the incentive not to move from one system to the
other is only partially addressed by these measures and is not completely
within the purview of administrative change.
If confirmed, what do you believe you will be
able to do to enable VA to change the current situation and to ensure that
separating sevicemembers are made aware of the benefits and services that
are available to them?
Response: I believe that the different demographics of separating service
members require targeted approaches. The wounded warrior with recognized
combat related injuries is one group. The active duty service member with
an active duty unit affiliation with its full time chain of command who
elects to separate from service prior to retirement is another. The
retiring service member who may become dual eligible is a third group. The
reserve (to include National Guard) service member, demobilizing and
returning to civilian life while remaining in the reserve force, subject
to call-up represents yet another group. Coordinating access for these
unique groups, crafting and delivering a common message with the
responsible service, appropriate counseling, the processes to deliver
those services, and measuring the success of the engagement are steps that
I would champion, if confirmed. I am fully supportive of web based access
to assistance and would explore other methods to ease communication for
Veterans / families in need of assistance.
Will your Army background be a plus or a minus in dealing with the
relationships between VA and the Navy and the Air Force?
Response: I believe my background will be a plus. My joint experience at
senior levels dates from my time in command of Army medical forces in
Korea while serving as the Joint Surgeon with staff oversight for both
armistice and wartime health care planning. As the first lead agent for
Tricare, I worked closely and collaboratively with Navy and Air Force
medical commanders in our region as well as with the VA leadership in
Washington State and Oregon. As Surgeon General I believe my relationships
with my fellow Surgeons General was positive and I have sustained those
relationships with those who have moved into the senior leadership
positions within the Services since my retirement.
19. Currently, the VA/DoD Senior Oversight Committee, co-chaired by Deputy
Secretaries Mansfield and England, meets on a weekly basis to deal with
joint VA and DoD issues. In part, the SOC has been addressing eh
Dole-Shalala Commission recommendations that can be corrected
administratively. If confirmed as Secretary, what would be your
priorities. for the SOC?
Response: I am aware of the eight "Lines Of Action" which, I believe,
address the high level key areas. If confirmed, a first priority will be
to gain an in-depth understanding of the level of progress within each of
these "Lines Of Action" and formulate my own assessment of progress,
priorities, or potential areas for addition.
20. If implemented as set, forth in the draft legislation presented by the
White House, the disability reforms recommended by the Dole-Shalala
Commission would create a multi-tiered disability system.
• How would you ensure that any changes to the
current disability system are fair, equitable, and uniformly administered
for all veterans?
Response: With the system as it is today, I have heard concerns that there
is unfairness, inequitable and non uniform decisions that occur from time
to time and across different geographic areas. Working with Congress and
the administration to revise the disability system offers the opportunity
to simplify the process, create a way ahead for an equitable and uniformly
administered system while meeting the needs of each of the tiers that
might be identified.
• Do you believe that a disability system that
treats veterans of different generations differently is desirable?
Response: The demographics of the Veteran population in the United States
represent a spectrum. The needs at different parts of this spectrum may be
quite different. The geriatric medical requirements of the World War II
generation are quite different from the acute needs of the recently
returned young Veteran; just as the social needs of the older Veteran who
may be leaving the active work force is different from the vocational and
rehabilitation needs of the your Veteran who aggressive assistance in
re-entering that work force. In between is the Vietnam generation who's
medical and life circumstance may require yet a different focus. It is
important that we provide the support and care needed that is appropriate
to the Veteran.
• Do you believe that veterans of prior conflicts
should be given a lower priority in claims processing than veterans of
current conflicts?
Response: I believe that the VA should strive, through, process
improvement, automation tools, training, and the expanded claims work
force that the committee has supported, to do "today's work today and to
standard" for all Veterans. A quality system must have the ability to
identify and deal with uniquely urgent or emergent situations by
exception.
• Do you believe that claims resulting from
combat versus non-combat injuries or diseases should be prioritized
differently?
Response: I believe the first priority for the VA is to those who have
sustained service connected disabilities whether injury or disease,
physical or mental, and to those veterans in need. I understand that the
term combat injury within the Dole-Shalala commission context is,
according to their guidance, broadly understood to include training for
combat whether in or out of a combat zone and with the opportunity for
Secretarial discretion to be more inclusive if warranted.
21. I understand that VA has solicited an outside bid to carry out two
technical studies that are being sought as a result of the recommendations
of the Dole-Shalala Commission. Once these studies are completed, do you
believe that the Secretary has the authority to implement changes to the
disability compensation schedule generally? Do you believe that the
Secretary has the authority to distinguish between multiple systems of
compensation and how they are to be applied to different groups of
veterans?
Response: The change to the disability compensation schedule requires
congressional approval. I do believe that legislation is required to
change the disability system itself. If confirmed, I pledge to work
closely with Congress, the Department of Defense, and the Veterans Service
Organizations to create and manage the change necessary to meet the needs,
both short term and life-term, of this newest generation of combat
veterans while insuring that we meet our enduring obligation to those of
the "Greatest Generation" and of my generation who have served before.
22. The Disability Benefits Commission recently released a report on its
two-and-a half year analysis of the benefits and services available to
veterans, servicemembers, their survivors, and their families to
compensate and provide assistance for the effects of disabilities and
deaths attributable to military service. That report contains 113
recommendations. In your view, how should VA analyze, and if appropriate,
implement the recommendations?
Response: Though I have not studied each of the
113 recommendations, I appreciate the work that went into developing such
a detailed report. VA should analyze each of the recommendations and
consider its value and validity in the scope of the larger revision and
changes which are being considered in the disability system. I believe
this is an area where the Senior Oversight Committee can add value,
urgency and leadership and I will support their efforts at the big picture
look and in ensuring appropriate improvements arc implemented in a timely
manner. For those recommendations which VA has the current authority to
implement, an overall implementation plan with timelines should be
developed based on a prioritization of the recommendations.
23. The relationship between VA medical centers and medical schools has
endured for more than 60 years and has been credited with improving
quality of care for veterans. These affiliations draw the best and
brightest physicians and help VA fulfill its research and educational
missions. I am concerned, however, about the viability of the
relationship. Please share your philosophy regarding the overall value of
academic affiliations, including the role affiliates play in staffing VA
facilities. What is your assessment of how Army medical interacts with
Academic medicine?
Response: The academic affiliations are one of the enduring strengths of
the VA. I believe that a robust teaching environment and high quality
research affiliations are contributing factors to the excellence of the
Veterans Health Administration. As with any relationship, it is healthy to
continue to re examine the outcomes of the relationship to ensure the
basis remains sound; that our Veterans benefit from the care of the
affiliate, that the research is of high quality and supporting the
Veterans' needs; that our Veteran population is providing needed access to
those in training, and that our changing demography of Veterans warrants
the maintenance of the affiliation. The relationship of Army Medicine with
academic medicine is less interdigitated. Army Graduate Medical Education
programs are individually accredited but often work with civilian academic
institutions for specific rotations. The Army training of ancillary
medical specialties is, except for degree producing programs, done largely
without affiliation with outside academic medical centers.
24. Many veterans, especially those with complicated health- issues, rely
upon the specialized services of VHA. Many of these services, like spinal
cord injury, blind rehabilitation, and prosthetics, are unique to VA and
are unmatched by the private sector. In an era of declining budgets and
decentralization of funds, please describe Your views on VA's
responsibility to maintain capacity in these programs.
Response: I fully support the continued excellence of VHA in these highly
specialized areas of expertise and service.
25. Post-traumatic stress disorder is a major concern for the Committee,
both in terms of compensation and health care.
• As a combat veteran, what is your experience
with veterans and PI SD?
Response: In combat I had members of my platoon who handled the same level
of exposure to the horrors of war quite differently; from a single soldier
becoming overtly combat ineffective; to another providing effective fire
in an ambush and then continuing to fire round after round even after the
action was completed; to the majority of my soldiers who were able to
perform their duties even in the face of the same combat stressors.
Personally I experienced some of the symptoms of post traumatic stress,
but at a level that would not be classified as a disorder. In fact, it is
part of what I believe is a normal range of adaptation. As long as two
years after I returned, I would sometimes startle at an unexpected loud
noise or have an occasional dream about combat. I was fortunate that these
faded with time for me and did not affect either my professional or social
life.
• Do you personally know veterans who continue to
suffer from PTSD or veterans who were diagnosed with PTSD, but who are now
no longer suffering from the condition?
Response: I do know Veterans who continue to suffer from PTSD. On a
personal basis I know Veterans who have had PTSD symptoms, who now are
coping well and are not disabled. I do not know if they had been formally
diagnosed with PTSD meeting the DSM IV diagnostic criteria. I believe that
this spectrum of mental health issues is treatable and we will learn more
as we continue to do scientific inquiry.
• Under what circumstances, if any, is it possible for a non-combat
veteran to suffer from PTSD?
Response: The circumstance in which an individual experienced, witnessed,
or was confronted with an event, combat or otherwise, that involved actual
or threatened death or serious injury, or a threat to the physical
integrity of self or others and whose response involved intense fear,
helplessness, or horror might cause that individual to suffer from PTSD.
• VA has significantly decreased its in-patient programs for veterans with
PTSD. What do you view as the role of in-patient treatment for PI SD, in
particular for veterans with co morbid substance case disorders?
Response: I am not aware of the extent of the reduction of in-patient
programs or of a backlog in access to these in-patient programs. I am
aware that significant advances in outpatient and community based programs
for mental health treatment and support have enjoyed success and
popularity, not only in the VA but nation wide. If confirmed, I will look
carefully at the balance between the various treatment modalities for PTSD
and the co morbid substance abuse disorders to ensure access to the right
care in the right location.
• Please describe the priority that you believe VA should place on
providing care to veterans with PTSD, and how would you ensure that
priority is manifested in budget requests and programmatic planning?
Response: Care of our Veterans with PTSD and with related symptoms short
of PTSD is rightfully a very high priority. I am aware of the recent
increase in mental health workers recruited by the VA and, if confirmed, I
would continue to support this initiative as well as exploring the issues
of access in rural areas of the country. I will work with Congress, OMB,
and the experts of the mental health community to identify new programs
and emerging treatments and in programming, the resources to support them.
• What are your views on the need fur more research into the best
treatments for PTSD?
Response: I believe that PTSD will be a hallmark condition of the current
conflict. I am proud to know that the VA has been at the forefront of
research in this area. I believe that there is still much to learn and
that it is the VA's obligation to remain at the forefront of this
learning.
26. Last year VA suffered on of the biggest losses of personally
identifiable information in history. Fortunately, the data was recovered
and there have been no repots of any personally identifiable information
being compromised. Secretary Nicholson testified last year that lie
intended, for the VA to become the "gold standard" for IT security within
the federal government. If confirmed, what priority will you put on
efforts to ensure that veterans' personally identifiable information is
protected?
Response: The protection of personally identifiable information will be a
high priority for me. Though I have not been briefed on the details, I
understand that, subsequent to the noted event, many specific policies,
procedures, and safeguards for information integrity have been put in
place; a major information management restructuring and centralization has
occurred, and investments have been made in hardware and security
applications. If confirmed, I will work to ensure accountability through
oversight and compliance monitoring. I understand that a specific office
with this function has been established.
27. The Dole-Shalala Commission recommended that a corps of well-trained,
highly skilled Recovery Coordinators be swiftly developed to ensure prompt
development and execution of patient-centered Recovery Plans for every
seriously insured se4rivcemember. The commission's recommendation called
for members of the Commissioned Public health Service to perform this
role. On October 31, VA and Do!) announced an agreement to provide
"federal recovery coordinators " for seriously inured, ill, and wounded
servicemembers and their families. Under the current concept the "federal
recovery coordinator" will he VA employees and the program will apply only
to those injured, ill or wounded in combat. Two questions:
• Do volt believe the care coordination role is one VA should he
performing prior to a servicemember's separation from the military?
Response: The complexity of the conditions and the complexity of the
systems can he bridged by a coordinated effort from the beginning in
laying out a recovery plan and monitoring it's execution in conjunction
with the patient, the patient's family and with the agencies involved. As
the care coordinator's role evolves it must involve the VA while the
service member is still on active duty.
• Do you believe that this program should he
focused solely on those seriously injured, ill, or wounded in combat, or
should it include others who are seriously injured or ill front service
elsewhere?
Response: If confirmed, I will endeavor to insure that the broad inclusion
of the "combat related" description is operative and that appropriate
additional exceptions have a clear and easy process for approval.
28. VA's vocational rehabilitation and employment program is one of the
smallest, yet most important, programs within the Department. It is the
linchpin for helping veterans, who incur service-connected disabilities,
achieve a fulfilling and gainful future. ]am deeply committed to making
sure that this program lives up to its full potential, especially when
individuals who have sustained serious injuries in combat are involved.
What are your thoughts on the role that vocational rehabilitation plays in
terms of the total rehabilitation of an individual recovering from severe
combat-related injuries?
Response: I agree with the importance of vocational rehabilitation in
support of the critical objective of making our Veterans self sustaining,
proud, and independent financially, socially, emotionally. I believe in
finding the right incentives to get them into these programs and keeping
them in these programs through the point of their transition to gainful
employment. If confirmed, I will strongly support these programs for
Veterans who need help in being productive citizens.
29. There has been significant discussion for at
least the last decade about the need for DoD and VA to create a
hi-directional/interoperable electronic health record. In 2003, the
President's Task Force to Improve Health Care Delivery for our Nation's
Veterans recommended that the VA and DoD develop and deploy such a record.
• What involvement did you have with this effort while Surgeon General?
Response: As the Surgeon General, I invited the President's Task Force and
personally briefed them on Army medicine to include being a champion for
DoD/VA sharing. I was a vocal supporter of the development of a
longitudinal, queriable patient record that would capture a service
members care from MEPS Station to VA Cemetery.
• Based upon your experience, do you believe that, to achieve this goal,
it is necessary for DoD's and VA's electronic health record systems to be
combined or to simply have the ability to share data?
Response: I do believe this is an obtainable goal that does not
necessarily require a single system. More important is the harmonizing and
adoption of a common health care lexicon and standardization of processes.
• Do you believe the current problems in the area
can he resolved in a timely manner so that VA doctors can have access to
complete medical history, including military health records?
Response: Timely is yesterday! So my answer is that we need to move as
quickly as possible with initiatives that do share digital data and
records as we advance to the interoperative use of computable data as an
achievable goal, while making up any short term shortfall with paper, and
personal communication. We must ensure, even without perfect electronic
transfer that providers have the information needed to provide outstanding
care appropriate to the continuum of care.
• As a former practicing physician, what medical information do you
believe VA health care providers need from DoD?
Response: I believe that VA physicians and the other health care providers
within VA need the most comprehensive medical information that DoD can
provide that is relevant to the patient's current active medical
conditions. It would be impossible to list here the full spectrum of the
specific data elements that might be required to do this. I would point
out that I do not see this information flow as a one way flow from the DoD
given particularly the service to those dual eligible Veterans; the
potential for a Veteran to return to active service after care in the VA;
and what our rehabilitative services might achieve in returning someone
who had been unfit back to duty.
30. VA currently uses the criteria of 170,000 unserved veterans within a
7.5-mile radius for purposes of establishing new national cemeteries. lit
the past, the Senate has supported this standard and has authorized new
cemeteries based upon VA's recommendations. Do you believe this should
continue to be the standard practice? In the absence of a VA
recommendation, do you believe Congress should legislate location of new
national cemeteries?
Response: I understand that the stated goal is, by 2011, to have 90
Veterans within 75 miles of a national or state veterans' cemetery. It is
my understanding that Congress has been extremely supportive of this
strategic direction; Five new cemeteries are targeted to open in 2008
because of your support. If confirmed, I will continue to work closely
with our National Cemetery Administration and Congress to insure the
resources are available for new cemeteries and to insure the standards are
maintained that mark the lasting tribute that commemorates Veterans'
service to our Nation.
31. What is your view of the correlation between combat service and
homelessness?
Response: I have read that up to one in four of the single male homeless
people are Veterans. It has been estimated that nearly 200,000 Veterans
may be homeless on any given night. Risks include poverty, lack of family
support, precarious living conditions.
I am told that, currently, there is little information to suggest that
combat service, per say, has a direct link to homelessness. But,
deployments with disruption of family lives, the effects of traumatic
events of combat may very well contribute to homelessness and is a
correlation that truly needs investigation.
• Do you believe that VA has a particular obligation to address
aggressively homelessness among veterans?
Response: Yes
• Public Law 106-377 fiends the Interagency Council on Homelessness and
makes the Secretary of Veterans Affairs a rotating chair of the Council.
What do you see as VA's role in working with other departments, agencies,
especially HUD, to address the needs of homeless veterans and their
families?
Response: I believe homelessness is a multifaceted problem that involves
individual economics, skills development, mental health and social well
being. If confirmed, I look forward to supporting the inter-agency /
interdisciplinary approach to understanding and supporting homeless
Veterans.
32. VA has a history of significant waiting times for care, a problem from
which specialty care particularly suffers. What are your thoughts on the
priority that should be accorded to reducing waiting times? In your view,
how long should a veteran be expected to wait, for a non-emergent health
care appointment?
Response: Excess waiting times result in patient dissatisfaction in any
health system and so must be a priority in a patient centered and, in our
case Veterans centered, care environment. In some cases excess waiting
times can have an impact on the course of an illness or in extended period
of patient distress. In other cases the Veteran him or herself may choose
a visit time outside of specified standards for their own convenience and
without compromising care. The waiting time standards should address this
spectrum. I understand that the VA standard for a non-urgent specialty
care appointment is within 30 days. This is consistent with the DoD
Tricare standard for non urgent specialty access and is reasonable with
the caveat that the referring provider can decrease that time depending on
the clinical assessment.
33. The active-duty military has become increasingly more reliant on the
Reserve components to accomplish its missions. What will you do, if
confirmed, to ensure that governmental services, including pre-, during,
and post deployment services, including transition services, are equally
available to National Guard and Reserve veterans?
Response: The "pre-, during. .." services are largely within the purview
of the Department of Defense. I believe in their recently instituted
annual Personal Health Assessment and reserve health readiness
initiatives. Where needed and feasible the VA should be supportive of
these DoD efforts. Regarding the "post deployment services, including
transition services . . . ", I will, if confirmed, work to make VA an
integral participant from emphasis on the Benefits Delivery at Discharge
program, to educating demobilizing Guard and Reserve Veterans about their
benefits, to encouraging their access to VA services in their immediate 24
months of post deployment presumptive period currently authorized, and to
working with the reserve component leadership through DoD collaboration.
34. In your view, how long should a veteran have to wait to have his or
her initial claim for compensation adjudicated?
Response: I am aware that the VA has as its strategic goal to provide
claims decisions in an average of 125 days. I know also that this goal as
been very difficult to achieve for many reasons. However, I believe VA can
and must do better. VA's compensation claims process is complex and the
evidence gathering often involves obtaining information from DoD, VHA,
other federal agencies, and private providers. I believe the recently
introduced Disability Evaluation System pilot, a joint VA and DoD
initiative, holds great potential for service members undergoing a Medical
Evaluation Board Proceeding. I am committed to working with all involved
parties and the Congress to streamline the disability compensation claims
process for all Veterans.
35. VBA has come under fire for the lack of timeliness of its claims'
processing. While VBA has made progress in improving timeliness and
accuracy of disability claims processing, further improvement is needed.
VBA has turned its attention to decreasing the amount of time it takes to
process a claim, but that improvement seems to he at the cost of a
decrease in the quality of its decision making. Do you have any views on
how a more balanced approach can he reached?
Response: The nearly 3,000 additional personnel for the Veterans Benefit
Administration dedicated to claims processing will help in the short term
and as they become better trained (as I understand it, a major focus of
Admiral Cooper) and experienced, the accuracy will improve in addition to
the timeliness.
However, I support the observation by multiple recent groups looking at
this problem, that a simplified disability system with updating of the
rating criteria on a go forward basis offers the best opportunity to have
clear, fair, and reproducible ratings that are supportable by modem rules
based information technology tools.
36. Accurate forecasting of usage of veterans benefits is essential in
planning for resources to administer those benefits. What do you see as
the Secretary's role in insuring that VA forecasts the need for additional
staffing resources so that Congress could appropriate those resources in
ci timely manner?
Response: I believe that the Secretary must use actuarially supported data
combined with real information from practice patterns and collaborate with
the DOD using their best data to provide accurate forecasting and
appropriately identify the resources to support those forecasted needs.
37. As one who knows first hand the value of educational benefits tinder
the GI Bill, 1 am deeply committed to making sure that this important
benefit is available to today's veterans. I recognize that this benefit is
not just a readjustment benefit in today's all volunteer force. It also
serves as a recruitment and retention tool.
• What are your thoughts about the delicate balance between these twin
aspects of the benefit? Do you believe that one outweighs the other?
Response: From my years in the military I appreciate the value that
soldiers place on their educational benefits. For many it is a way to take
an economic burden of education off of their parents, for others, the GI
Bill represents the only route to additional schooling post high school.
It is perhaps most important as a motivator for service for those who
enlist not specifically seeking a career. For the service member returning
from combat, it can be a powerful readjustment benefit as described in the
Bradley report of 1956. Education can produce a better adjusted Veteran
and one who is better positioned to resume life as a productive citizen. I
absolutely share this committee's belief, and appreciate your history of
action, in investing in those who have served this nation in uniform
• How do you see the VA working with DoD on GI
Bill issues, such as the size, scope, and details of benefits under the
various GI Bills and in reaching out to eligible individuals to ensure
that they are aware of and use their benefits?
Response: The forum for such collaboration exists with the DoD/VA Joint
Executive Council. If confirmed, I would support a focused look at this
subject and would work with Congress and DoD and our Veteran Service
Organizations to take the results of that work into an effective update of
our GI Bill programs.
38. There has been increasing pressure in recent
years for VA to contract for services in local - especially rural -
communities where VA facilities care not easily accessible. Mental health
is one area of particular emphasis in this regard. What do you believe is
VA's responsibility for meeting the needs? Including mental health needs,
of rural veterans? If confirmed, what emphasis would you place on this
issue?
Response: Rural Health is a topic that has come up on several occasions in
my prehearing meetings with the committee members and so I appreciate that
emphasis is needed. I believe that Veterans in rural areas may be well
served locally, if care is available, but that the VA has an obligation to
monitor the quality of that care. I also appreciate the challenges of
making this care part of the continuum of care expected of a quality
health system. If confirmed, I will ask early in my tenure for an update
from the recently created Department Of Rural Health, explore the various
interagency opportunities, and the potential for leveraging technologies
such as Telemedicine 1 Telepsychiatry to better serve remote Veterans.
39. There are a number of issues about the current GI Bill that I find
troubling.
• One aspect that especially concerns me is that there are individuals who
are serving in combat, placing their own lives in harms way, who have had
to make a monetary contribution in order to establish eligibility for GI
Bill benefits. What are your thoughts on this issue?
Response: It is my understanding that the Montgomery GI Bill was enacted
by Congress in 1984 and designed for a peacetime active duty service and
supported a contribution that put skin-in-the-game. If confirmed, I will
work with DoD and this committee to reexamine this premise in light of the
current conflict and the sacrifices of today's service members and
Veterans.
• I am also very concerned that there are individuals who are serving with
the National Guard and Reserves and who may have completed multiple
deployments in combat zones but who stand to lose eligibility to valuable
educational assistance benefits if they separate from their unit. What are
your thoughts about these individuals and the portability of their
benefits?
Response: I do not yet have a detailed understanding of the full scope of
this issue. However, my sense is that once these valuable educational
assistance benefits are earned, they ought to follow our service member.
If confirmed, I will follow up on this issue to fully understand the issue
and make appropriate corrections within my authority or recommendations
for change.
40 All Federal agencies have certain responsibilities to maximize
contracting opportunities for veteran-owned small business and especially
service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses. In general, it appears
that VA has a better record than most other federal agencies. However,
some have raised concerns that to meet the goal of increased contracting
with these businesses, there has been increasing reliance on partnerships
between large corporations and small service-disabled veteran-owned
businesses, in which the involvement of the SDVOB is really only on paper.
In your view, does the VA have an obligation to ensure that contracts
with. small service-disabled veteran-owned businesses truly involve and
benefit these firms in the actual contracted activity?
Response: I am aware of the VA's emphasis on Veteran-owned and,
especially, service-disabled veteran owned small business as preferred
contractors. Given the magnitude of some of the programs and projects it
may be unrealistic to expect successful performance by any small business,
veteran owned or not in the prime contractor role. I whole heartedly
endorse our government providing preferential treatment to our own Veteran
small business owners and particularly those service-disabled small
business owners. If confirmed, I will work closely with our contracting
office to insure we have clear outcome objectives that include development
of these veteran owned small businesses (coaching, teaching, mentoring,
investing & rewarding) and consider that such metrics may be applied to
the large corporations who may be bettered positioned to function as a
prime but with a specified level of subcontracting to the veteran owned
concerns.
41. I have long advocated strategies for recruiting and retaining highly
trained medical professionals within the VA health care system. Just a few
years ago, I supported legislation to create a more competitive pay system
for VA physicians and dentists, as well as other legislative initiatives
targeted at nurse recruitment. Despite these efforts, VA continues to face
a growing nursing shortage, as well as vacancies for specialty care
physicians. In your view, what should VA do to improve personnel
recruitment and retention at VA health care facilities, particularly of
nurses? What more can VA realistically do to improve recruitment in areas
where there are fewer specialty care physicians overall?
Response: The recruitment of all health care personnel, including
physicians and nurses, remains a challenge in US health care. While I do
not know all of the programs that are currently in place to support the
recruitment and retention of VA physicians and nurses, I do believe that
the VHA's reputation as a high quality health care system is a strong
recruitment incentive. Generally, VHA will have to continue to ask for
authorities to allow it to match market pay and performance incentives
that are offered in the community sector. Not to do so would jeopardize
the quality of health care providers that treat Veterans. Additionally, I
would look to ensure that the practice environment for our providers is
supportive, collaborative, and an inducement to retention.
42. Many in the newest generation of veterans are technologically savvy.
Veterans can submit claims for compensation over the Internet. However,
such applications are treated as e-mail copies of the application and are
not integrated into the claims process. Do you believe that VA has a role
in improving the use of technology, for the processing of initial
applications for compensation and to aid in the timeliness and accuracy of
claims adjudication?
Response: Yes, I believe that the VA should
quickly adapt an e-commerce model that enables those increasingly
technologically savvy Veterans with a positive, secure, and easy
experience.
43. For some medical conditions that occur after service, the scientific
information needed to connect the medical condition and the circumstances
of service may be incomplete. When information is incomplete, Congress or
the Secretary of Veterans Affairs has the authority to presume
disabilities and diseases as service-connected for the purposes of
compensation. If confirmed as Secretary, what would be your approach for
evaluating whether a presumption is warranted?
Response: I am aware that there have been recommendations made by the
President's Commission on Veteran's Disability Benefits and by the
Institute of Medicine on presumption. I am also aware that this is a
critical policy decision that determines benefits for millions of
Veterans. If confirmed, I will study these recommendations and others
under in formulating my approach.
44. As you know, women constitute and ever-growing segment of the Armed
Forces and consequently, the overall veterans populations. What do you see
as the primary challenges to appropriately treat and serve women veterans
in VA_ facilities? Are there aspects of your experience working with women
in the military that can translate into innovative solutions for improving
care for women veterans?
Response: I believe the challenges include facilities, culture, and
expertise in women's health issues that have not traditionally resided
within the VA. Military medicine has traditionally cared for all family
members with delivery of babies one of the most common admissions in that
system. Even with that base, we had adjustments to the deployment culture
as more women came into the force. I had a specific consultant on women's
health issues to focus on our active duty women. The importance of
ambience, a sense of caring, of attention to the privacy needs and
sensitivities to security are important in addition to the expertise and
availability of equipment and services to address the physical and
emotional needs of women Veterans. These capabilities need to be planned
for prospectively as the number of women veterans grows to the anticipated
10% of the veteran population by 2020.
45. A major issue in recent years has been the proposal for mandatory
funding. for VA health care, with many veterans' organizations calling for
the guaranteed funding of the systems each year at a level set by law.
What do you see as the benefits or drawbacks or both to such an approach
to funding for health care?
Response: I appreciate this to be a very complex issue and one for which I
will require detailed briefing to provide a more informed response. I
understand that VA's position has been that annual actuarial projections,
rather than pat formulas, are the most rational way to project the
resource needs for Veterans health care. I do have an open mind on the
subject and intend to carefully study it before forming an opinion.
46. At the present time, military recruiters are
actively recruiting servicemembers from countries in the Pacific Islands,
such as the Federated States of Micronesia. Some veterans benefits, such
as vocational rehabilitation services, VA home loans, and health care are
not normally provided outside of the Untied States. In your view, what
obligation does the government have to provide non-citizen disabled
veterans benefits and services needed to compensate for and overcome the
disabilities which they incurred after being recruited into United States
military service?
Response: I believe that all disabled veterans should receive the benefits
earned through their service, regardless of citizenship status. I have
been informed that VA has legal authority to furnish hospital care and
medical services to any veteran residing outside the United States without
regard to the Veteran's citizenship if such care and services are
necessary for treatment of a service-connected disability. VA may also
provide vocational rehabilitation programs outside the United States to
assist veterans in becoming employable and obtaining suitable employment.
The law, however, does not provide for independent living services outside
the Untied States. I have also learned that VA guaranteed home loans and
grants for Specially Adapted Housing for seriously disabled veterans
cannot, by regulation, be made to veterans living outside of the Untied
States and its territories. This is, in large part, because of problems in
administering this type of benefit to veterans in foreign countries where
there is no VA presence. If confirmed, I will ask for this area to be
reviewed.
47. In 2004, a blue-ribbon panel completed an exhaustive review of VA's
vocational rehabilitation and employment program. In its findings, it made
more than 100 recommendations. Of those, VA reports that 88
recommendations have been implemented to some extent. I remain concerned,
however, that there are fur too inane eligible veterans who do not apply,
complete the evaluation process, have rehabilitation plan developed, or
complete their plan. No seems to really know why there is such a low
completion rate when measured against the number of veterans who apply and
who are determined entitled. What priority do you believe VA should place
on determining why the successful completion rate for individuals in this
program is so low?
Response: I have not had the opportunity to review the blue-ribbon panel
review noted. However, I do believe that the VA should place emphasis on
outcomes, not just participation, in all of our programs. If confirmed, I
will review the panel recommendation and the results of our vocational
rehabilitation and employment programs.
48. Restructuring and downsizing in several VA health care facilities have
led to contracting with community providers for care. Also, a large number
of existing VA community- bused outpatient clinics are run by non-VA
providers. What do you believe is VA's responsibility for monitoring care
furnished by contract providers and how might that monitoring be carried
out?
Response: As VA works to provide access to meet the needs of Veterans, it
is incumbent on us to maintain the same high quality standards that we
have within the VHA. Appropriate monitoring of claims, appropriate
contracting; appropriate retrieval of health records to compliment the
continuity of care are all mechanisms that might be used to meet this
obligation.
49. There is legislation currently pending in Congress that would provide
World War II Merchant Mariners with a tax-free annual pension of $1,000 a
month, a payment based upon neither disability nor financial need.
• What is your opinion about VA providing certain groups with entitlement
to a monetary payment that is based neither on being disabled nor in need
Response: The VA administers the entitlements determined by law and I do
understand that there are some historic precedents for such groups.
However, I believe the priority should he given to those Veterans with
service connected disability or Veterans in need.
• Should VA provide such special compensation to
a group without doing the same for similarly situated groups?
Response: The first priority of the VA should, I believe, be to those with
service connected injuries or disease whether physical or mental, and to
those Veterans in need. The VA should administer what other benefits are
legislated by Congress to the best of our ability with the resources
applied to insure our first priority commitment is fulfilled.
50. Under the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of
1994 (USERRA), employers - including the Federal government - have certain
responsibilities to re-hire individuals who are seeking to return to their
jobs following a period of active service. It is particularly troublesome
to one that an individual who has been sent into battle by the government
would need to do battle with that same government for the right to regain
a job and its associated benefits. However, it does happen and it happens
far too often. Indeed, according to Department of Labor, more than 30
claims of violations of USERRA were lodged against the Department of
Veterans Affairs in fiscal 2006. This should be embarrassing to the
agency. If confirmed, what steps do you believe you can take to ensure
that VA follows USERRA?
Response: I believe that the legal protection of employment for those men
and women who have left their jobs to serve this country is yet another
important contribution made by this committee. I know that among our
deployed reservists, it is a concern that is often on their minds. T also
agree that the federal government and perhaps, most particularly, the
Department of Veterans Affairs ought to be the positive example.
If confirmed, I will look into the practices that would have the
Department of Veterans Affairs be out of compliance with the law and make
corrections where that occurs.
51. Public Law 106-117 contains a provision mandating that VA provide
non-institutional extended-care services to veterans who are enrolled in
the VA health care system. While most veterans would prefer to stay out of
nursing homes, GAO confirmed that VA is nowhere near full capacity on the
non-institutional side of long-term care.
What is your view of the value of non-institutional long-term care?
Response: I believe that non-institutional care can provide a high quality
of life enhanced by societal and family interaction when so enabled.
Do you have any personal or professional experience in this area?
Response: My personal experience in this area was with my mother-in-law
who, because of Alzheimer's disease required progressive nursing home care
and with my father who, until his death, eschewed a nursing home but was
enabled by home health and a capable caregiver to remain in a home setting
that was much more satisfying to him. As a cardiac surgeon, I often worked
with the social workers to find intermediate care for. recovery and
rehabilitation but realized the quicker one could transition the patient
back to non-institutional environment the more likely it was that my
patient would he productive and enjoy a higher quality of life.
If confirmed, what steps will you take to promote VA's development of
non-institutional extended care?
Response: First, I was gratified to understand that more than 90 percent
of VA's medical centers provide home and outpatient long-term care
programs and that about 50 percent of VA's total extended care patient
populations receives care in non-institutional settings. I fully support
VA's patient focused approach and these programs and, if confirmed, I will
review the metrics of success and the incentives to support this program
with our Veterans.
52. VHA has had considerable success in using electronic health records.
What are your views on how technology might be used to address problems
that arise from VBA's reliance on paper files ?
Response: I believe that this is a very important axis of advance. I
understand that much work has been done toward the goal of automating VBA
processes, but that the paper service medical records of the past have
limitations on digitization potential. On a go forward basis, this
constraint should be eliminated and with a simplified disability schedule,
decision support information technology should provide a valuable tool in
addressing these problems.
53. In 1941, Congress passed legislation which, in recognition of the
difficulty of using official military records to establish the disability
of veterans who were disabled in combat areas, provided for a relaxed
evidentiary standard in the case of claims from veterans who served in
combat areas. It has recently come to my attention that VA defines
"combat" very narrowly when applying this standard, requiring a veteran
claimant to produce proof of direct combat with an enemy. I have
introduced legislation which would recognize service in a combat zone as
"combat" for purposes of VA claims. Do you see this as an appropriate
response to this issue?
Response: If confirmed, I will review the details of the definitions
related to combat. My understanding within the Dole-Shalala description of
combat related, a disability acquired while training and preparing for
combat does not have to be sustained in the Combat Zone to qualify.
54. Recently, it came to the Committee's attention that there may be
thousands of Reservists who have returned from mobilizations longer than
20 months, including extended deployments in Iraq or Afghanistan, to find
that while their length of service qualifies them, for Chapter 30
benefits, due to Army procedures, their orders, fall short of the 730-day
threshold and thus they are ineligible for full educational benefits. A
specific example is the 11-34th BCT, from Minnesota, which returned front
Iraq in July after a 16month deployment. Although almost 4,000 members of
the unite had served 22-months on active duty, roughly half had orders
that called for active duty service. for up to 730 days and half did not.
A us despite all having served equal lengths, only half are eligible for
Chapter 30 benefits.
It is the Committee's understanding that the Department of Defense has
elected to pursue a remedy in this specific case through the correction of
military records. They have also indicated that they are working with the
VA to establish a mechanism for the processing of claims for affected
individuals in the most expeditious manner possible.
If confirmed, I ask that you have appropriate officials work with DOD in
and effort to avoid problems such as this in the future. Also, please let
the Committee know if you believe a legislative remedy is necessary.
Response: If confirmed I will insure that we work with DoD to address this
problem and to find the solution to avoid such problems in the future.
55. VA research not only makes a major contribution to our national effort
to combat disease, but it also serves to maintain a high quality of care
for veterans through its impact on physician recruitment and retention.
The Administration has made efforts to limit the types of VA research to
those conditions associated with combat. What is your view of limiting the
scope of research performed in VA facilities?
Response: The many different age groups and an increasing gender mix of
Veterans expand the scope of research that is relevant to Veterans issues.
Our first priority in the use of our discretionary research funding is to
insure we are the experts in service connected medical issues, but the
influence of those conditions over a life time allows our researchers
latitude in the scope of their inquiry.
56. Through VA's vocational rehabilitation program, VA assumes certain
responsibilities for the provision of employment assistance to veterans
who complete a plan of vocational rehabilitation. This assistance can take
a variety of forms. I believe it would be desirable that VA cooperate and
coordinate with the department of Labor's Veterans' Employment and
Training Service so that duplication of effort can be minimized. If
confirmed as Secretary, what will you do to involve both DOL and DOD in
efforts to ensure that employment - related issues are addressed
seamlessly and without duplication of effort?
Response: If confirmed, I pledge to work diligently with both DOL and DOD
to have a collaborative environment supporting the very important outcome
of employment for our returning Veterans.
57. What is your view of the VA's CARES process and VA's Capital Plan
overall? How will you involve senior Veterans Health Administration
leadership, Congress, veterans service organizations, affiliates, and
other stakeholders in the remaining decisions related to the
implementation of the Capital Plan?
Response: I believe in the importance of an overarching strategic planning
process for long term restructuring of capital assets and investment to
meet the projected future needs. I have not yet had the opportunity for
detailed briefings on execution of the CARES recommendations. I do note
that those recommendations were based upon data only as current as 2004.
In moving forward, I appreciate the importance of engaging senior Veterans
Health Administration leadership, Congress, Veteran Service Organizations
and other stakeholders to insure that our investments support the
projected needs and demographics of our Veterans while addressing the
realities of the significantly aging capital infrastructure.
58. Diagnosis for substance use disorders (SUD) in veterans from the
current war continue to increase. In your view, does combat play a role in
increasing the likelihood ,for developing an SUD? Does VA have a
particular responsibility for treating SUDs?
Response: I am aware of recent studies from our current conflict that
support the role of the stress of combat in the development of substance
use disorders. There is documented co-morbidity with PTSD that is well
recognized. VA does have a responsibility to treat substance use disorders
as they do any health issue that prevents a Veteran's reintegration into
society.
59. VBA has had some success in the past with improving the efficiency of
claims processing by consolidating certain services into fewer offices.
What are your views on the pros and cons of such consolidation?
Response: I appreciate the importance of the issue of the claims backlog
and the time required to process a claim in an accurate and timely manner.
I support exploring new models of claims processing, measuring the
outcomes, and adopting best practices. I have not been briefed to the
extent that I have formed an opinion on the pros and cons of consolidation
in this claims environment.
60. Under the VA's vocational rehabilitation
program, there is authority for a program of independent living services
for individuals who are severely disabled. However, there is an annual cap
of 2,500 enrollees in this program. Concerns have been expressed that this
enrollment cap may be adversely impacting the provision of services to
those most severely injured in combat. Do _you believe that this cap is
appropriate or should these services be available to all who need there?
Response: Independent living services must be available to all
service-disabled veterans who can benefit from them. I need to learn more
about this issue. If an annual cap is keeping any disabled veteran from
participating in the program, I will work with Congress to resolve this
issue.
Under current policies, there is a protracted period of evaluation and
multiple reviews of decisions concerning seriously disabled veterans
seeking independent living services. If confirmed, will you look into what
steps might be taken to shorten the evaluation period and reduce the
layers of review?
Response: If confirmed, I will look into what steps might be taken to
streamline the evaluation of independent living decisions.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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