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UPDATE: VA TRIAL CONCLUDES WITH CONTRASTING VIEWS OF
VETERAN CARE -- The judge is questioning how much
authority he
has to order changes in the VA, even if he finds
deficiencies.

For background on this lawsuit (with
backlinks)...click here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/nf08/nfAPR08/nf042608-3.htm
The official web site for this lawsuit is here...
http://www.veteransptsdclassaction.org/index.html
Story here...
http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_9110626?nclick_check=1
Story below:
-------------------------
VA trial concludes with constrasting views of vet
care
By PAUL ELIAS
Associated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO—A two-week trial that scrutinized the quality of health care
for veterans concluded Wednesday with the judge questioning how much
authority he had to order changes in the Department of Veterans Affairs,
even if he found deficiencies.
"One of the problems I have in this case is this court is restricted by
various statutes, binding regulations and case law," U.S. District Court
Judge Samuel Conti told lawyers.
Justice Department lawyer Daniel Bensing, who was defending the system
that serves nearly 6 million veterans, argued that the veterans groups
suing the VA should take their case to Congress, not the courts.
Arturo Gonzalez, who represented the two veterans groups that sued,
countered that the judge did have power to order changes because the VA's
"system has crashed and it has been overwhelmed" by an increasing number
of claims.
Last year, the VA processed 840,000 claims, an
increase from 675,000 in 2001. The VA attributed the increased to aging
Vietnam veterans with growing health problems. But Gonzalez argued that
the VA is unprepared to care for the returning veterans from Afghanistan
and Iraq.
Conti, who heard the case without a jury, ordered lawyers for both sides
to file additional legal documents on the issue.
The veterans groups sued the VA last year and accused it of failing to
adequately provide mental health care, including inadequate suicide
prevention, and taking too long to process claims. Internal VA e-mails
disclosed during trial showed that four to five veterans under VA care
commit suicide and another 1,000 veterans attempt suicide each month.
"The fact that veterans are killing themselves at alarming rates are
undisputed," Gonzalez told the judge, urging him to order dramatic changes
at the VA. Gonzalez suggested that the judge appoint a VA monitor who
would report to the judge and ensure compliance with any court-ordered
reforms.
Gonzalez also complained that it was taking the VA an average of about 180
days to decide whether to award a veteran benefits and that appeals of
adverse decisions were taking years to resolve.
A study released earlier this month by the RAND Corp. estimates that
300,000 U.S. troops—about 20 percent of those deployed—are suffering from
depression or post-traumatic stress from serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"These veterans need help," Gonzalez said. "The VA has demonstrated they
won't do it on their own."
Bensing told the judge that the VA already considers addressing suicides
and suicide attempts "a major priority." The mental health budget has
increased from $3.2 billion to $3.5 billion annually, and the agency
recently hired 3700 new mental health professionals, he noted.
"There is a special focus on suicide prevention," Bensing said. "Enormous
steps are being taken out the field to enhance the mental health service
to veterans."
Bensing conceded that it was taking too long to process VA claims, but
that the agency was working to streamline a complicated system handling a
record volume.
"Processing time is a troubling issue," Bensing said. "These waiting times
do no represent a deprivation of care."
The judge ordered both sides to file post-trial legal papers by May 19,
after which he said he would decide the issue.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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