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DEMOCRATIC PRESS RELEASE
October 15, 2007
AKAKA INTRODUCES BILL TO ENHANCE VA PAIN CARE
Promoting Improvements in Treatment of Veterans
Suffering from Chronic and Acute Pain
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Today, Senator Daniel K. Akaka (D-HI), Chairman of the
Veterans' Affairs Committee, and fellow Committee member Senator Sherrod
Brown (D-OH), introduced legislation that would enhance the Department of
Veterans Affairs' pain management program. The Veterans Pain Care Act of
2007 would assist in focusing attention on pain management as a new
generation of veterans suffering from pain enter VA's health care system.
This legislation seeks to significantly bolster VA's existing pain
management efforts and bring them up to par at a national, system-wide
level. Under the bill, VA would be required to establish a pain care
initiative at every VA health care facility, with each utilizing a
professionally recognized pain assessment tool or process to ensure that
every patient with chronic or acute pain is diagnosed and treated
properly.
This bill, among others, is scheduled to be reviewed at the Committee's
October 24, 2007 hearing on pending legislation. It has been endorsed by
the Pain Care Forum, a consortium representing over 75 health care and
health advocacy organizations from across the country. This initiative is
another important component of the ongoing effort to improve the quality
of health care available to our Nation's veterans.
"This legislation has the potential to help the thousands of veterans who
are living their lives in pain," Akaka said. "Pain is often seen as
increasing with age, but it is now a growing problem among younger
veterans injured in Afghanistan and Iraq. This legislation will centralize
and standardize pain assessment and management through the use of
cooperative research centers and the education of health professionals.
These are important steps in understanding, diagnosing, and treating the
many veterans living with acute and chronic pain."
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Chairman Akaka's floor statement can be found
below:
Mr. President, today I, along with my colleague Senator Brown, introduce
legislation that would enhance VA's pain management program. It is
estimated that nearly 30 percent of Americans - that's some 86 million
people - suffer from chronic or acute pain every year. A recent study
conducted by VA researchers in Connecticut found that nearly 50 percent of
veteran patients that are seen at VA facilities reported that they
experience pain regularly.
While pain increases in severity with age, it is also a growing problem
among younger veterans who have been injured in the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Many of these veterans are coming home with severe injuries -
often traumatic brain injuries - that require intensive rehabilitation. In
some cases, these younger veterans will have to live with the long-term
effects of their injuries, of which pain is a large and debilitating part.
Pain management is an area of health care that by many accounts is not yet
to up to par, in both the private and public sectors. The bill we are
introducing would enhance VA's pain management program on a national,
system-wide level, by requiring VA to establish a pain care initiative at
every VA health care facility. Every hospital and clinic would be required
to employ a professionally recognized pain assessment tool or process, and
ensure that every patient who is determined to be in chronic or acute pain
is treated appropriately.
The profile of a veteran in pain is often times different than that of his
or her counterpart in the private sector. For example, veterans suffering
from chronic pain are more likely to be receiving treatment for other
problems including depression, substance abuse, alcoholism, or post
traumatic stress disorder. Understanding and treating their pain must be a
priority, and this bill will help VA enhance the department's existing
pain management program.
VA's current pain management efforts are worthwhile, but are unfortunately
not adequate to meet the all of the needs of veterans. Pain management in
VA continues to be relatively decentralized and unstandardized. Some VA
medical centers have adopted successful approaches and procedures to deal
with pain, while others have been less active. Fortunately, VA has begun
the work of identifying professional talent and developing ideas that
provide the groundwork of an effective pain management program. This bill
would build upon that foundation and help ensure that these ideas become
practice.
This bill provides us with an opportunity to help the thousands of
veterans who are living in pain each and every day. I urge all of my
colleagues to support this legislation.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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