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STATEMENT OF
NANCY DORN
DEPUTY DIRECTOR, OFFICE
OF
MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET
BEFORE THE
COMMITTEE ON ARMED
SERVICES
SUBCOMMITTEE ON MILITARY
PERSONNEL
AND THE
COMMITTEE ON VETERANS’
AFFAIRS
SUBCOMMITTEE ON HEALTH
MARCH 7, 2002
Chairman McHugh and Chairman Moran and Members of the
Subcommittees:
Thank
you for the opportunity to address an issue that is among the highest
priorities of this Administration.
One of President Bush’s campaign promises was to invest in
health care, and a component of that promise was to better coordinate
the programs and benefits of the Department of Defense (DoD) and the
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).
This commitment was first described weeks after the
inauguration in the President’s
Blueprint for New Beginnings FY 2002 budget document.
A few months later, President Bush issued an Executive Order to
create The Presidential Task
Force to Improve Health Care Delivery for Our Nation’s Veterans to
ensure that all options of coordination would be explored.
At the same time, we released the FY 2002 President’s
Management Agenda, where coordination of DoD and VA programs and
systems was one of 14 government-wide initiatives.
Finally, the recently released
FY 2003 Budget
incorporated this priority. These
four actions in the first year of this Administration clearly show
that this President is committed to seeing progress in this area.
Unlike any other Administration, we want to see results on a
grand scale – not just on an ad hoc basis - to better serve our
Nation’s veterans. I
would emphasize that this is not a budget cutting drill.
It is an effort to ensure better access and quality of care,
and a seamless transition from active service to veteran status.
You will hear
detailed descriptions of the efforts of DoD, VA, and the Task Force
from the other distinguished panel members.
I will be summarizing some of the key items from the Executive
Office of the President’s perspective.
However, first, let me describe the changes that we made within
The Office of Management and Budget to ensure maximum and effective
attention to this Presidential priority.
In February of last year, we reorganized so that all DoD and VA
policy issues are addressed by the Associate Director for National
Security Programs, and DoD and VA health systems are addressed in the
same Branch. This created
an environment that fosters greater partnership and coordination of
decisions within the Administration.
We have already seen the benefit of this new structure as we
address the myriad of policy, management, and budget issues. For
example, justifications for proposed medical care construction
projects must now include a joint effort assessment.
Information technology funding is monitored to ensure that we
do not develop independent capabilities when both medical care systems
have a mutual need for similar systems.
The
Director of OMB is personally committed to this effort, as is the
Domestic Policy Council. We
have supported the Task Force efforts continually since its inception
and DoD and VA coordination is a team effort in this Administration.
We are particularly proud of the focus of the leadership in
both Departments on the issue. While
sharing and coordination has taken place for years between the
agencies on an ad hoc basis – this is the first time that the
leadership of both Departments have ensured that this is a high
priority, and communicated and monitored the priority within their
organizations. Together
they are tackling global issues that can set a framework for the
future.
How do we see coordination efforts helping the military members
and veterans directly? Two
overarching areas of coordination will play a big role in the quality
and access of service – information technology and facility sharing.
Sharing information and technology can make a world of
difference. It can speed
up service, ensure safer healthcare, and inform veterans of earned
entitlements. In
addition, it can transport information from one Department to another
– continually providing fuel for innovative managers to improve
service. All
veterans, by definition, were once members of the Armed Services.
While on active duty their information was tracked by a system
that covered everything from security clearances, to health care
entitlements, to commissary privileges. There
is no reason that when military members leave service that they must
provide information on paper to VA that is already on computers at DoD.
Likewise, when these same veterans and their families apply for
multiple types of VA benefits, they should not have to provide
identical information each time.
The President’s Management Agenda includes an initiative that
would improve the VA enrollment systems.
Such a system should make transition from active duty to
veteran status seamless and include the eligibility and enrollment
status for each of the numerous DoD and VA benefits.
For over 20 years, the DoD has operated a centralized automated
system to enroll and track individuals having entitlements to DoD
benefits and services called the Defense Enrollment/Eligibility
Reporting System (DEERS). DEERS
is a large database that accurately records the benefits eligibility
information for over 20 million beneficiaries in multiple government
agencies and could be expanded to include VA.
DEERS is uniquely positioned to bridge the gap between the two
Departments. It already
supports a modest level of real-time exchange of information on
veterans, setting the stage for even closer cooperation.
The Departments are exploring their mutual options in this
area. While there
may be some up-front costs of using DEERS for VA, there should be
long-terms savings. We
have not calculated these costs or savings yet.
One other area of coordination of information technology that
we are addressing is in the medical care area.
Both DoD and VA create independent patient medical records when
a beneficiary uses its health care systems – just as files are
created for you when you visit your doctor.
Each Department has aggressively moved towards computerizing
these records to allow all medical providers throughout its own system
to access and rapidly update individual patient records.
Since all veterans start out in the DoD system and hundreds of
thousands of them use both systems annually, it is imperative that
this effort be coordinated. This
challenge can be achieved and would improve overall health care.
Currently, if a patient sees a DoD doctor on Wednesday, it is
very difficult to ensure that treatment and medication are consistent
with those the patient obtained from a VA doctor on Monday.
Managing care is critical to well-being.
One of the Administration’s E-Government initiatives is
Health Care Informatics, and development of a patient record system
falls under its scope. Hence,
developmental efforts in both Departments will focus on interoperable
information technology solutions.
This is a major effort, which will likely require a sustained,
multi-year effort to implement completely.
Active duty personnel, dependents, and veterans all benefit by
DoD and VA sharing facilities when appropriate.
The two Departments share less than ten facilities today.
In many communities, DoD and VA hospitals are close to each
other and offer similar services (e.g. primary care, surgery, or eye
care). However,
traditionally neither has considered the other as an option in
determining construction or health delivery needs.
In light of the new emphasis on sharing, DoD and VA are working
together to solve mutual problems in a number of areas where both
Departments have facilities located close to one another.
We are working with DoD and VA on a multitude of other
coordination issues including patient transportation and medical
training. On the
transportation side: if a veteran patient needs to be moved long
distances from one VA hospital to another, he is typically transported
via commercial airline. This
is expensive. DoD
routinely transports military patients in planes with unused space.
DoD and VA are assessing how, where, and when to put VA
patients on DoD planes. Where
appropriate, this will ensure any needed medical attention in the air
for the patient, provide DoD with more patients on these transports to
enhance readiness skills, and lower the cost to both Departments.
On the medical training side: DoD
has a relatively young and healthy patient population, but to maintain
physician readiness skills sends some physicians to private sector
facilities to work with more complex patients at a cost to DoD.
VA has an older patient population with a broader range of
health complications that are more severe and complex than patients
seen in DoD. VA's medical
system is recognized as a world-class training organization and has
provided some portion of medical training to most practicing
physicians in the United States.
GAO reported that DoD physicians who worked with VA patients in
DoD/VA sharing initiatives reported increased proficiency due
to the broader range of patients.
DoD and VA have initiated discussions to create a pilot program
for DoD to place some medical providers in VA facilities for skills
enhancement training.
Finally,
let me address the President’s proposal that
would ensure that military retirees choose either DoD or VA as
their health care provider through annual open enrollment seasons.
This legislative proposal was included in both the FY 2002
and FY 2003 President’s Budgets, and would ensure higher-quality
care and more efficient use of resources.
We believe it is imperative to coordinate the care provided to
military retirees by these two agencies.
Under our proposal, retirees using both systems for health care
in the same year would do so under managing physicians' oversight and
direction. They would
benefit from having one health care system arrange for all of their
health care and prescriptions. As
in the current situation, all families of retirees would remain with
DoD, since VA treats only retirees themselves.
The key to this proposal is informed choice.
Retirees would evaluate, on an annual basis, which agency
provides the most appropriate setting for their health care needs,
much as other federal employees do each year in the Federal Employees
Health Benefits Program. However,
while a retiree might choose DoD as his or her primary health care
program, he or she will not necessarily be prevented from utilizing
VA's services. Currently,
137 VA Medical Centers contract with DoD's health care program,
TRICARE, to provide a variety of health care services. We intend that
this sharing relationship continue and expand, such that retirees who
choose DoD as their primary health care system may be referred to VA
by DoD for certain services, including those VA specialty services
used by disabled military retirees.
In closing, I hope I conveyed to you in this short summary how
important DoD/VA coordination is to the President and some of the
areas that the Administration is pursuing to ensure top quality
services to military members and their families and veterans.
Our efforts are a good first start, but we will need your help
and support to make it work.
This concludes my prepared statement.
I would be pleased to respond to any questions that you might
have.
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