WASHINGTON, — The Department of Veterans Affairs and the
Department of Defense continue to have problems collecting and sharing
medical data, hampering treatment for wounded soldiers, lawmakers said
at a Congressional hearing today.
The hearing before the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee was a follow-up
to a January hearing where officials of the Defense Department and the
Veterans Administration, which are two separate government departments,
said that significant progress had been made in collecting and sharing
data on wounded soldiers.
But it also comes a little over a month after V.A. officials complained
bitterly to Congress that the Pentagon was blocking their access to
medical information.
Witnesses told lawmakers today of frustrations with lost medical
records, a lack of communication between federal and state V.A. offices
and a medical system that still has not adjusted to the demands of
younger veterans.
L. Tammy Duckworth, an Army major who lost both her legs in Iraq, said
the V.A. has not kept up with the latest technology in prosthetics.
Though addressing the needs of older veterans, the department is still
not prepared to handle the needs of younger and more active veterans,
she said.
“There is simply not enough time for the Department of Veterans Affairs
to catch up in the field in time to adequately serve the new amputees,”
said Ms. Duckworth, who is the director of the Illinois Department of
Veterans’ Affairs.
Denise Mettie described the suffering experienced by her son, Evan
Mettie, a retired Army specialist, who sustained severe traumatic brain
injury in Iraq in 2006 and over the past year has been moved from
facility to facility while being prevented from getting better care in
private and specialized clinics.
”There are many private hospitals which have many years of experience in
treating and rehabilitating patients like my son,” she said. “It is
unfair to deny us access to the same level of care that you would choose
for your children.”
But Dr. Michael J. Kussman, the executive-in-charge of the Veterans
Health Administration, said his department was well-prepared to handle
new strains.
“There is a learning curve as far as new prosthetics,” he said. “But as
far as other needs, we have been the international experts when it comes
to things like post traumatic stress disorder and we have actually been
leading the country in regards to traumatic brain injury.”
He described how the V.A. has teams of social workers based at a handful
of military treatment facilities to help soldiers navigate the
bureaucracy, and said his department was still working with Defense
Department officials to gain regular access to certain military medical
records.
Some senators were not convinced.
“I’ve just about had it with administration officials who assure us
everything is being taken care of,” said Senator Patty Murray, Democrat
from Washington, complaining that the lack of information was limiting
Congress’s ability to determine the appropriate budget and priorities
required to address veterans’ needs.
“We can’t get full answers on the number of service members treated for
traumatic brain injury. We can’t get accurate projections on how many
veterans will need inpatient mental health care. We can’t even get
accurate figures on the number of amputations.”
Senator Richard Burr, Republican of North Carolina, pushed for quicker
action to correct the problems.
“How many real life experiences do we have to list before you do away
with the work groups and studies and implement something?” he asked.
“We’re dealing with something that doesn’t need more study.”
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