Statement of
John Brown, Director
Seamless Transition Office
Department of Veterans Affairs
May 19, 2005Mr.
Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee, I appreciate the opportunity
to appear before you today to discuss efforts of the Department of
Veterans Affairs (VA) toward effecting a seamless transition for
separating service members from the Department of Defense (DoD) to VA.
First, let me assure you that interest in this issue comes from the
highest levels of the Department. Though only recently taking office,
Secretary Jim Nicholson has reaffirmed VA’s determination to assure that
maximum efforts to serve the needs of newly returning service members
are undertaken by the Department.
Deputy Secretary Gordon Mansfield is also deeply engaged in this
endeavor as he co-chairs VA/DoD Joint Executive Council (JEC) with the
Under Secretary for Defense for Personnel and Readiness, Dr. David Chu.
In March of this year, Deputy Secretary Mansfield addressed the Joint
DoD/VA Conference on Post Deployment Mental Health as they reviewed the
potential impact of returning personnel.
Today, my statement will focus primarily on the efforts of VA’s Seamless
Transition Office (STO) to achieve a seamless transition for Operation
Iraqi Freedom (OIF) and Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) veterans and
their families. The STO is one part of the Department’s network of
services used to meet these needs.
Before I begin, however, I would like to share with you brief
discussions of three issues that play a large role in helping to ensure
a seamless transition for returning OIF and OEF service members, the
availability of VA health care services, the oversight and guidance of
the JEC, and VA/DoD electronic health information exchange. Later in my
statement, I will include information about health care utilization of
OIF and OEF veterans.
Health Care Services
VA is well positioned to provide health care to returning OIF and OEF
veterans. As the largest integrated health care organization in the
United States, we can meet their needs through nearly 1,300 health care
facilities throughout the country, including 696 community-based
outpatient clinics that provide health care access closer to veterans’
homes. We also have 207 Vet Centers, which are often the first contact
points for returning veterans seeking health care and benefits near
their homes.
VA offers comprehensive primary and specialty health care to our
enrollees. The quality of our care is second to none. We are an
acknowledged leader in providing specialty care in the treatment of such
illnesses as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), spinal cord injury,
and traumatic brain injury (TBI). We are now leveraging and enhancing
the expertise already found in our four TBI centers to create Polytrauma
centers to meet the complex needs of certain seriously injured veterans
from all parts of the country. I will have more to say about the
Polytrauma Centers later in my statement.
VA/DoD Joint Executive Council
The JEC provides overall support and guidance for the joint VA/DoD
initiatives detailed throughout my statement. As stated earlier, the JEC
is co-chaired by the Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs and the Under
Secretary for Defense for Personnel and Readiness and ensures high level
attention from both Departments to maximize opportunities to improve
service to our mutual beneficiaries. Through this forum, VA and DoD have
achieved significant success in improving interagency cooperation in
areas such as deployment health, pharmacy, medical-surgical supplies,
procurement, patient safety, clinical guidelines, geriatric care,
contingency planning, medical education, information
management/information technology, financial management and benefits
coordination.
VA/DoD Electronic Exchange of Health Information
Our ability to provide care to returning OIF and OEF service members is
enhanced to the extent that we can obtain accurate health care
information from DoD in the shortest time frame possible. In 2002, VA
and DoD gained approval of their Joint Electronic Health Records
Interoperability Plan – HealthePeople (Federal). VA began implementation
of Phase I of the plan, the Federal Health Information Exchange (FHIE)
that same year. The FHIE supports the one-way transfer of electronic
military health data on separated service members to the VA Computerized
Patient Record System for viewing by VA clinicians treating veterans.
Since FHIE implementation in 2002, DoD has transferred records for over
2.9 million unique patients to the FHIE repository, where more than 1
million records have been viewed by VA clinicians. VA and DoD are now
developing interoperable data repositories that will support the
bidirectional exchange of computable data between the DoD Clinical Data
Repository (CDR) and the VA Health Data Repository (HDR), known as
Clinical Data Repository/Health Data Repository (CHDR).
Seamless Transition
Now let me explain the history, operations, and responsibilities of the
STO. In August 2003, VA’s Under Secretary for Benefits and Under
Secretary for Health created a new VA Taskforce for the Seamless
Transition of Returning Service Members. This taskforce was composed of
VA senior leadership from key program offices and the VA/DoD Executive
Council and focused initially on internal coordination efforts to ensure
that VA approached the mission in a comprehensive manner as well as
education of VA staff on the needs of returning veterans.
Although the responsibilities and operations of the Taskforce were
limited to this comparatively narrow scope, their importance should not
be underestimated. By ensuring the success of our initial encounters
with returning OIF and OEF service members and veterans, we are
establishing a sound basis for an ongoing and long-term positive
relationship with our veteran patients and their families. This is
especially important for those veterans who have the greatest need for
our help, the most seriously disabled combat veterans who transition
directly from Military Treatment Facilities (MTFs) to VA medical centers
(VAMCs) to continue their care and rehabilitation.
In January of this year, VA established a permanent Seamless Transition
Office to assume the duties of the Taskforce. Although the STO
administratively reports to the Deputy Under Secretary for Health, it
may truly be described as a “One-VA” endeavor. Composed of
representatives from the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), the
Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA), and the National Cemetery
Administration (NCA), the STO now coordinates all Departmental
activities related to the provision of benefits and health care for
those service members transitioning directly from MTFs to VA facilities.
The STO also provides coordination within VA for all other initiatives
of DoD and the States to provide outreach services to OIF and OEF
veterans. The office relies on the expertise of other VA program offices
and VA field facilities to support its mission.
Seamless Transition Office Successes
Over the last 2 years, the Seamless Transition Task Force and the STO
have achieved many successes in the areas of outreach and communication,
trending workload, data collection, and staff education. We have worked
hard with other offices in VBA, VHA, and DoD, to identify OIF and OEF
veterans and to provide them with the best possible information and
access to both health care and benefits. VA has put into place a number
of strategies, policies, and programs to provide timely, appropriate
services to these returning service members and veterans – especially
those transitioning directly from DoD MTFs to VAMCs. The ability to
enroll for VA health care and file for benefits prior to separation from
active duty is the result of the seamless transition process. Throughout
the process, we have greatly improved dialogue and collaboration between
VA and DoD to better serve OEF/OIF veterans.
Liaisons and Benefits Counselors at DoD and VA
VA has assigned full-time social workers and benefits counselors to
seven major MTFs, including Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the
National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Brooke Army Medical Center,
Eisenhower Army Medical Center, and the Madigan, Ft. Carson, and Ft.
Hood MTFs. These VA social workers work closely with MTF treatment teams
to ensure that returning service members receive information and
counseling about VA benefits and services. They also coordinate the
transfer of active duty service members and recently discharged veterans
to appropriate VA health care facilities and enroll them into the VA
health care system. Through this collaboration, we have improved our
ability to identify and serve returning service members who have
sustained serious injuries or illnesses while serving our country. VHA
staff has coordinated more than 2,000 transfers of OIF/OEF service
members and veterans from an MTF to a VA medical facility. VBA benefits
counselors are also stationed at MTF’s to provide benefits information
and assistance in applying for these benefits. These counselors are
generally the first VA representatives to meet with the veteran and
family members. From October 2003 through mid-March 2005, VBA benefits
counselors interviewed almost 5,000 OIF/OEF service members hospitalized
at MTFs.
Points of Contact at Regional Offices and Medical Centers
Each VAMC and VA Regional Office (VARO) has identified a point of
contact (POC) to coordinate activities locally and to assure that the
health care and benefits needs of returning service members and veterans
are met. VA has distributed guidance on the role and functions of case
management services to field staff to ensure that the roles and
functions of the POCs and case managers are fully understood, and that
proper coordination of benefits and services takes place.
Benefits Delivery at Discharge
Many of the OIF/OEF service members who are not seriously injured and
therefore do not separate through one the MTFs, participate in VA's
Benefits Delivery at Discharge Program (BDD). This program allows
service members to begin the VA disability compensation application
process 180 days prior to separation. In most cases, disabled service
members participating in the BDD Program begin receiving VA disability
compensation benefits within 60 days of their separation from active
duty, which serves to ease the transition from active duty to civilian
status. To expedite claims processing for these service members, VA and
DoD have agreed upon a single examination process, using VA's
examination protocols, if an examination is also required by the
military prior to separation. A memorandum of agreement to establish
single examination procedures was signed by VA and DoD in November 2004.
The BDD Program is currently offered at 140 military installations. In
FY 2004, the BDD Program received approximately 40,000 claims from
transitioning service members.
Outreach
For veterans whom we do not encounter in the MTF’s or the mobilization
stations during VA benefits briefings, the STO has worked with VA’s
Veterans Integrated Service Networks (VISNs) and VAROs to coordinate
other outreach strategies. These individuals may not have the same
serious combat-related injuries we have seen in the MTFs; however, they
may have other health care, readjustment issues, or benefits needs that
require assistance.
VA has developed and distributed pamphlets, brochures, and educational
videos (“Our Turn to Serve”), designed for VA employees and others
involved in this critical outreach efforts. A second video was
developed, entitled “We Are By Your Side,” for returning Guard/Reserve
members and family to help them through the readjustment period upon
returning home. Working with DoD, we developed a brochure entitled “A
Summary of VA Benefits for National Guard and Reserve Personnel.” The
brochure summarizes the benefits available to this group of veterans
upon their return to civilian life. We have distributed over a million
copies of the brochure to all mobilization stations to ensure the widest
possible dissemination through VA and DoD channels. It is also available
online at:
http://www.va.gov/environagents/docs/SVABENEFITS.pdf and http://www.defenselink.mil/r2/mobile/pdf/va_benefits_rs.pdf.
I have brought with me copies of several of these products and ask that
they be made part of the record.
VA also actively participates in discharge planning and orientation
sessions for returning service members. With the activation and
deployment of large numbers of Reserve/National Guard members for the
onset of military actions in Afghanistan and Iraq, VA, in collaboration
with DoD, has greatly expanded outreach to returning Reserve/National
Guard members and their family members. National and local contacts have
been made with Reserve/National Guard officials to schedule pre- and
post-mobilization briefings for their members at the unit level.
Returning Reserve/National Guard members can also elect to attend the
formal 3-day Transition Assistance Program (TAP) workshops provided by
VA personnel at mobilization stations. Knowing that this is an optional
program for the Reserve/National Guard, VA has developed strategies to
brief family members while the service member is still deployed and has
arranged time on the unit training schedule and during reunions and
family day activities.
From FY 2002 through the 1ST quarter of the FY 2005, VBA military
services coordinators have conducted more than 19,000 briefings,
reaching a total of more than 700,000 active duty service members. These
briefings include 1,795 pre- and post-deployment briefings attended by
over 88,000 activated Reserve and National Guard service members. During
FY 2004 alone, VBA military services coordinators provided more than
7,200 benefits briefings to over 261,000 separating and retiring
military personnel, including briefings aboard some Navy ships returning
to the United States. Almost 1,400 of these briefings were conducted for
Reserve and National Guard members. As of January of this year, we had
already provided 2,260 briefings to 79,000 returning service members in
FY 2005.
Other outreach activities include the distribution of flyers, posters,
and information brochures to VAMCs, VAROs, and Vet Centers. VA has, in
fact distributed more than 1.5 million brochures to DoD demobilization
sites and USO’s. VA has produced and distributed one million copies of a
VA health care and benefits wallet/pocket card. The card lists a wide
range of VA programs, and provides relevant phone numbers and email
addresses.
VA has produced media aimed specifically at OIF and OEF veterans.
Examples of these include:
• Newsletter: Three issues of the "OIF & OEF Review." This newsletter
provides a wide range of information about health and other benefits
issues to VA personnel, and veterans and their families. The newsletter
has been widely distributed to VAMCs, VAROs, and Vet Centers, and mailed
out to all returning OIF/OEF veterans identified by DoD as leaving
active military duty.
• Information Sheets: Two information sheets have been published, one
each on OIF and OEF service, summarizing health issues for those two
deployments. These were distributed to all VAMCs, VAROs, and Vet
Centers.
• Video Production: A video targeted at returning OIF/OEF veterans and
their families, entitled “We Are by Your Side.” The video thanks service
members for their service and introduces both VA and DoD services that
are available to returning vets as they transition to civilian life.
This video was mentioned earlier in my statement. Another video was
developed for VA and DoD employees to assist them in understanding the
seamless transition process. This video can be used in a variety of
settings such as waiting rooms, new employee orientations, and at
off-site functions such as health fairs. Again, I ask that copies be
made a part of the record.
As service members separate from the military, VA contacts them to
welcome them home and explain what local VA benefits and services are
available. Furthermore, we have made a wide selection of general
information available to OIF and OEF veterans online through a direct
“Iraqi Freedom” link from VA’s Internet page (www.vba.va.gov/EFIF). This
website provides information on VA benefits, including health care
services, DoD benefits, and community resources available to regular
active duty service members, activated members of the Reserves and
National Guard, veterans, and veterans’ family members.
Last year, VA began sending “thank-you” letters together with
information brochures to each OIF and OEF veteran identified by DoD as
having separated from active duty. These letters provide information on
health care and other VA benefits, toll-free information numbers, and
appropriate VA web sites for accessing additional information. The first
letters and information brochures were mailed in April 2004, and thus
far, VA has mailed letters to more than 290,000 returning OIF/OEF
veterans. In 2005, letters and educational “toolkit” were sent to each
of the National Guard Adjutants General and the Reserve Chiefs
explaining VA services and benefits. I am asking that a copy of this
letter also be made part of the record.
A critical concern for veterans and their families is the potential for
adverse health effects related to military deployments. VA has produced
a brochure that addresses the main health concerns for military service
in Afghanistan, another brochure for the current conflict in Iraq, and
one that addresses health care for women veterans returning from the
Gulf region. These brochures answer health-related questions that
veterans, their families, and health care providers have about these
military deployments. They also describe relevant medical care programs
that VA has developed in anticipation of the health needs of veterans
returning from combat and peacekeeping missions abroad. These are widely
distributed to military contacts and veterans service representatives;
they can also be found on VA’s website.
Another concern is the potential health impact of environmental
exposures during deployment. Veterans may have questions about their
symptoms and illnesses following deployment. VA addresses these concerns
through such media as newsletters and fact-sheets, regular briefings to
veterans’ service organizations, national meetings on health and
research issues, media interviews, educational materials, and websites,
like www.va.gov/environagents. One major initiative to educate VA and
DoD healthcare providers is the Veterans Health Initiative (VHI).
Through the VHI, VA has developed training programs for such topics as
care of war wounded, TBI, PTSD, and military sexual trauma, among
others. This CD-ROM training has been distributed to VA and DoD
Healthcare providers. Additionally, we have created a web page for VA
employees on the activities of VA’s seamless transition initiative.
Included are the points of contact for all VA health care facilities and
VAROs, copies of all applicable directives and policies, press releases,
brochures, posters, and resource information.
VA Health Care Utilization
Veterans who have served or are now serving in Afghanistan and Iraq may,
following separation from active duty, enroll in the VA health care
system and, for a two-year period following the date of their
separation, receive VA health care without co-payment requirements for
conditions that are or may be related to their combat service. Following
this initial two-year period, they may continue their enrollment in the
VA health care system but may become subject to any applicable
co-payment requirements.
As of February 2005, VA had data on 360,674 OIF and OEF veterans who had
separated from active duty. Approximately 24 percent of these veterans
(85,857) have sought health care from VA. Most of these veterans have
received outpatient care, while only a comparatively small number
(1,980) have had an episode of hospitalization. Reservists and National
Guard members make up the majority of those who have sought VA health
care (44,178, or 52 percent). Those who separated from regular active
duty have accounted for 48 percent (41,679). However, among separated
OIF/OEF veterans eligible for VA health care, a greater percentage of
veterans of regular active duty (29 percent) has sought VA health care
than have Reservists/National Guards personnel (20 percent).
OIF and OEF veterans have sought VA health care for a wide-variety of
physical and psychological problems. The most common health problems
have been musculoskeletal ailments (principally joint and back
disorders) and diseases of the digestive system, with teeth and gum
problems being the predominant complaints. In total, OIF/OEF veterans
have accounted for only slightly more than one percent of our total
veteran patients (4.9 million in FY 2004).
Mr. Chairman, VA is aware that there has been particular interest about
mental health issues among OIF and OEF veterans and VA’s current and
future capacity to treat these problems, in particular PTSD. First, I
have been asked to assure the Subcommittee that VA has the programs and
resources to meet the mental health needs of returning OIF and OEF
veterans. Second, in regard to PTSD among OIF and OEF veterans, I have
been asked to provide the further assurance that the PTSD workload that
we have seen in these veterans has been only a small percentage of our
overall PTSD workload. In FY 2004, we saw approximately 279,000 patients
at VA health care facilities for PTSD and 63,000 in Vet Centers. Our
latest data on OIF and OEF veterans indicate that as of February 2005,
9,688 of these veterans seen as patients at VAMCs carried an ICD-9 code
corresponding to PTSD. Additionally, 2,332 veterans received services
for PTSD through our Vet Centers. Allowing for those who have received
services at both VAMCs and Vet Centers, a total of 11,224 individual OIF/OEF
veterans had been seen with actual or potential PTSD at VA facilities
following their return from Iraq or Afghanistan. This figure represents
only about three percent of the PTSD patients VA saw in FY 2004. It
should be noted, however, that some of the 11,224 OIF/OEF veterans may
include those with a provisional (“rule-out”) diagnosis of PTSD who were
being assessed for this disorder or other, unrelated disorders.
Meeting the comprehensive health care needs of returning OIF and OEF
veterans who choose to come to VA is one of the Department’s highest
priorities. VA is confident that its FY 2005 budget and the Presidents’
FY 2006 budget request contain sufficient funding to allow us to provide
for all the health care needs of OIF and OEF veterans. Of course, we
will continue to monitor the health care workload associated with OIF
and OEF veterans to ensure that VA aligns its health care resources to
meet their needs.
Polytrauma Centers
One of the harshest realities of combat in Iraq and Afghanistan is the
number of service members returning from Iraq and Afghanistan with loss
of limbs and other severe and lasting injuries. VA recognizes that it
must provide specialized care for military service members and veterans
who have sustained severe and multiple catastrophic injuries. Since the
start of OIF/OEF, VA’s four regional Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Lead
Rehabilitation Centers (located in Minneapolis, Palo Alto, Richmond, and
Tampa) have served as regional referral centers for individuals who have
sustained serious disabling conditions due to combat. These programs are
specially accredited to provide comprehensive rehabilitation services
and TBI services. Patients treated at these facilities may have a
serious TBI alone or in combination with amputation, blindness, or other
visual impairment, complex orthopedic injuries, auditory and vestibular
disorders, and mental health concerns. Because TBI influences all other
areas of rehabilitation, it is critical that individuals receive care
for their TBI prior to, or in conjunction with, rehabilitation for their
additional injuries.
In accordance with section 302 of Public Law 108-422, VA has developed a
plan to expand the scope of care at these four centers and create
Polytrauma Centers. This plan builds on the capabilities of the regional
referral centers but adds additional clinical expertise to address the
special problems that the multi-trauma combat injured patient may face.
Such additional services include intensive psychological support
treatment for both patient and family, intensive case management,
improvements in the treatment of visual disturbance, improvements in the
prescription and rehabilitation using the latest high tech specialty
prostheses, development of a clinical database to track efficacy and
outcomes of interventions provided, and provision of an infrastructure
for important research initiatives. Additionally, the plan addresses
services for patients in the outpatient setting for ongoing follow-up
care not requiring hospitalization. The plan provides for enhancements
to existing rehabilitation outpatient clinical services to ensure that
necessary services can be provided within easier access to the patient’s
home.
On April 7, 2005, VA published a directive that requires the four
Polytrauma Centers to assign social worker case managers at a ratio of
one case manager for every six patients. These case managers will
initiate contact with service members and veterans and their families
before they are transferred to the polytrauma centers and will follow
them throughout their rehabilitation and treatment. Additionally, VA
Voluntary Service (VAVS) Managers at the four polytrauma centers are
working with local community organizations and businesses to provide
necessary information and services to family members who are staying
with their family members. National Veteran Service Organizations (VSOs)
have pledged their support to provide phone cards, discount lodging
coupons, and local support for transportation of the family members.
Each family member will receive a welcome package with information of
the local area, coupons for lodging, and area attractions and coupons
for the Veterans Canteen Service. In Palo Alto, for example, the Chief
VAVS meets with the family members upon arrival and seeks support from
area businesses and VSOs based on family needs.
Future Initiatives
• Although the Seamless Transition initiative was initially created to
support service members who served in OIF/OEF, it is intended to become
an enduring process that will support all service members who, as a
result of injury or illness, enter the disability process leading to
medical separation or retirement.
• VA is working with DoD to obtain a list of service members who enter
the Physical Evaluation Board (PEB) process. The PEB list will identify
those veterans who sustained an injury or developed an illness that
precluded them from continuing on active duty and resulted in medical
separation or retirement. The list will enable VA to contact these
service members to initiate benefit applications and transfer of health
care to a VAMC prior to discharge from the military.
• VA is strengthening its support system for the veterans’ and their
families to accommodate them in Fisher Houses and hotels as the veterans
continue the rehabilitation process. VA’s goal is to honor each new
veteran and their family with compassion, dignity, and coordination of
every service and support that can help to restore function. VA has made
great strides in ensuring our veterans experience a smooth transition to
civilian life. VA is committed to institutionalizing the seamless
transition process as we continue to further increase collaboration with
DoD.
• Finally, the STO will lead the Department in continuing to orient VA
culture to meet the expectations of our newest veterans and their
families.
Conclusion
VA’s most important mission is to “care for him who has borne the
battle.” I am honored to lead an office dedicated to fulfilling this
mission. Mr. Chairman, this concludes my statement. I will be happy to
respond to any questions that you or other members of the Subcommittee
might have.
|