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VETS' COMMISSION CHIEF TRIES TO SELL PTSD RE-
EVALUATIONS TO CONGRESS -- Lt. Gen. Terry Scott:
"It seems to me if you don't reevaluate, you
won't
know how the treatment is doing."

forward commentary by Larry Scott
Get ready...here it comes!
This issue has been bubbling-under for some
time...regular re-evaluations for veterans receiving VA disability
compensation for mental health issues, especially PTSD.
And, Congress is ready to do it.
From a purely logical standpoint, there is no
good argument against it.
The argument will be: A disability, over a
period of two or three years, will not remain static. It will get
better or worse. So, a re-evaluation is in order.
The only argument the veterans' service
organizations can present against this is that it will cause stress to the
veteran or that it has never been done before.
But, those who will push this will say that the
veteran has as good a chance of getting an increase in compensation as a
decrease... which, statistically, appears to be the case.
I see this as a reality in the next few years.
Then, look for some type of "mandatory" treatment
for PTSD vets. It won't be called "mandatory," but it will be just
that.
Currently, over half of all vets diagnosed with
PTSD drop out of treatment once they receive their VA compensation.
Many see this as a disturbing trend. So, some form of "mandatory"
treatment is the logical next step.
For more about the Veterans' Disability Benefits
Commission and Lt. Gen. Terry Scott (no relation), use the VA Watchdog
search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q
=veterans+disability+benefits+commission&op=ph
Story here...
http://news.medill.northwestern.edu/washington/news.aspx?id=75895
Story below:
-------------------------
Veterans groups push for reform of disabled
veterans benefits
by Elizabeth Gibson
WASHINGTON -- Veterans groups Thursday added their support to
recommendations calling for modernization of a system that determines what
benefits disabled veterans receive relative to severity of their wounds.
Now, the vets said, they want to see some action and enforcement from the
government on recommendations made by the Veterans Disability Benefits
Commission.
“You’ve got the riffle, squeeze the trigger,” Todd Bowers, director of
government affairs for the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, said
at a hearing of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee.
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Representatives from Iraq and Afghanistan
Veterans of America, Veterans of Foreign Wars and The American Legion said
they like the ideas of updating the rankings that match benefits to
disabilities.
They also want extra compensation beyond health care for the impact that
wounds could have on quality of life of veterans.
But they expressed reservations about mandatory check-ups every two years
for veterans already getting compensation.
“A lot of veterans would view these reviews as an attempt to take away
their benefits,” said Gerald Manar, deputy director of the VFW’s national
veterans service.
Researching for the commission, the Institute of Medicine of the National
Academies recommended case by case determinations of whether veterans need
follow-up exams.
However, the benefits commission felt that required reevaluations for some
types of disabilities, particularly mental health issues such as
post-traumatic stress disorder, would ensure that those needing regular
check-ups didn’t slip through the cracks, said retired Lt. Gen. James
Scott.
Scott, chairman of the commission, said, “It seems to me if you don’t
reevaluate, you won’t know how the treatment is doing.”
The commission also recommended basing benefits on a sliding scale to
determine the degree to which different disabilities detract from a
veteran’s quality of life. The veterans groups said this was a worthy idea
but would require more research to find a way to measure how much an
amputation versus post-traumatic stress disorder would affect quality of
life.
Several of the commission’s recommendations stretch back to previous
panels meeting more than 50 years ago. The Veterans Disabilities Benefits
Commission report, released last October with 113 recommendations, should
be sufficient to get started and set deadlines for action, leader of
veterans groups said.
Thirty-five percent of disability ratings have not been updated since
1945, according to the Institute of Medicine.
“Despite the fact that the disability system was already outdated more
than five decades ago there have been no fundamental reforms,” Sen.
Richard Burr R-N.C. said at the hearing. “It is a failure of a highest
magnitude if we don’t provide these heroes who have sacrificed so much for
their country with the benefits and services they need and deserve.”
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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