Reacting to shabby treatment of wounded soldiers at Walter Reed Army
Medical Center, the House on Wednesday created a coterie of case
managers, advocates and counselors for injured troops returning from
Iraq and Afghanistan.
The "Wounded Warrior Assistance Act," approved 426-0, also establishes a
hotline for medical patients to report problems in their treatment and
demands an end to the red tape that has frustrated disabled service
members as they move from Pentagon to Veterans Affairs Department care.
The bill would affect some of the more than 25,000 U.S. service members
wounded in hostile action since military operations began in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
"We cannot allow those who have fought our foreign enemies in the
defense of freedom to come home and fight the federal bureaucracy to get
the health care they need," said Rep. Candice Miller, R-Mich., a member
of the Armed Services Committee.
The White House, in a statement, said that while those goals were
commendable, the legislation is premature.
It suggested that Congress wait for a report from a presidential
commission and a task force on the war-wounded created after the
exposure of poor outpatient living conditions and treatment at Walter
Reed. Those findings are expected by the end of July.
But lawmakers from both parties, intent to show support for troops
regardless of divisions over the war in Iraq, were in no mood to wait.
More can be done later, said Armed Services Committee Chairman Ike
Skelton, D-Mo., but the legislation is "needed now to provide immediate
support for our wounded warriors."
The bill requires Senate action before it goes to the president.
The White House also objected to a provision imposing a one-year
moratorium on a program letting private companies compete with public
agencies for military hospital work contracts. The administration said
the program, criticized for contributing to substandard conditions and
inadequate non-medical staffing at Walter Reed, is generating billions
in savings.
Congress was making sure that, despite the problems at Walter Reed, the
medical facility not be closed as part of overall base closure plans. A
Senate bill to fund the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan now being debated,
and a similar House-passed bill, both stop the closing of Walter Reed
unless the defense secretary certifies there will be no disruption in
patient care.
Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., whose support for a strong military is a
cornerstone of his presidential aspirations, said he was particularly
pleased with a provision that would improve personal care by limiting
medical care case managers to only 17 cases at a time. He praised
another requiring that each wounded service member be assigned an
advocate to help with such issues as housing and transportation.
Hunter, the top Republican on Armed Services, also likes the
legislation's move toward more information-sharing between the Defense
Department and the VA and steps to ease the transition to veteran
status, so those wounded "don't have the bureaucracy finally telling us
after three or four or five months that the records have been lost."
The defense secretary would be required to provide disabled service
members being separated or retired from active duty with a written plan
for transition to VA programs.
Several amendments approved by the House directed that more attention be
paid to the mental health of returning combatants. One, by Reps. Patrick
Kennedy, D-R.I., and Rep. Joe Sestak, D-Pa., requires the Pentagon to
develop a plan to prevent post-traumatic stress disorder and other
stress-related problems including substance abuse conditions.
The bill also:
# Requires the VA to increase the number of physicians at its hospitals.
# Requires that appropriate members of Congress be notified of the
hospitalization of a combat-wounded service member.
# Assigns independent health care professionals to serve as counselors
and advocates for service members being considered by medical evaluation
boards.
# Improves training for health care professionals and medical care case
managers on the particular conditions of recovering service members.
# Sets up a pilot program in the Army similar to the Marine Wounded
Warrior Regiment program that keeps track of those still requiring
medical care on an outpatient basis.
By Jim Abrams, Associated Press Writer
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