GOV/MIL House passes benefits fix for ailing ‘blue water’ veterans, now awaits Senate’s move

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
I saw this and in a quick search didn't see it posted on the board. I figured it would be of interest to many here....HC

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.militarytimes.com/veter...-blue-water-veterans-now-awaits-senates-move/

House passes benefits fix for ailing ‘blue water’ veterans, now awaits Senate’s move

By: Leo Shane III  
June 25


WASHINGTON — House lawmakers on Monday advanced plans to extend disability benefits for nearly 90,000 “blue water” veterans exposed to toxic chemicals during the Vietnam War but until now denied compensation for that danger.

The move was hailed as a major breakthrough by veterans advocates, but it will likely take several months before the Senate moves on the same plan and officially starts the process of getting payouts to those elderly veterans.

The House approved the plan by a vote of 382-0. It now heads to the upper chamber, where Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chairman Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., has called the issue a top priority for the remainder of the year.

However, that committee must first tackle the confirmation of VA Secretary nominee Robert Wilkie, a process that starts with a hearing this Wednesday. That work will delay hearings on the new benefits bill for at least a few weeks, leaving no clear timetable on when the legislation may be completed.

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Advocates hope to restart debate over benefits for blue water Navy vets
Advocates are hoping lawmakers will take another look at legislation giving compensation to Vietnam veterans exposed to Agent Orange during their tours in the waters of southeast Asia.

By: Leo Shane III

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On Monday, bill sponsor Rep. David Valadao, R-Calif., called the House vote long overdue.

“Every day, thousands of brave veterans who served in Vietnam fight the health effects of Agent Orange,” he said. “Many are in pain and suffering. It is far past time we give them the comfort and care they deserve.”

Under current department regulations, Vietnam veterans with rare cancers and other illnesses can receive medical care from VA but are not always guaranteed disability benefits.

Troops who served on the ground in Vietnam or patrolled inland rivers during the war are assumed to have been working with or near Agent Orange, and are given special status when filing disability benefits claims to speed up the process.

But so-called “blue water” veterans — who served on ships off the coast of Vietnam — still need to prove direct exposure to Agent Orange for their illnesses to be labeled as service-connected. In many cases that’s impossible, since scientific evidence from the ships was never collected.

Lawmakers in recent years pushed to fix the oversight and mandate the special status for sailors who served off the coast. But they have also struggled with how to cover the costs.

HouseVetAffairs

@HouseVetAffairs
The Veterans’ Affairs Committee just passed the VA MISSION Act, Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act and 14 other bills to honor and support America’s heroes. Read more here: https://go.usa.gov/xQN4z

9:04 AM - May 8, 2018

Veterans Affairs’ Committee Passes VA MISSION Act, Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act, 14 Other...
veterans.house.gov
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Last month, lawmakers on the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee reached a compromise to raise that $1.1 billion through a new fee on department-backed home loans.

It’s expected to cost a typical veteran homeowner about $350 over 10 years, but only about 60 percent of borrowers will be required to pay for it. Most veterans with a disability rating who use the home loan program will be exempt.

House Veterans’ Affairs Committee member Mark Takano, D-Calif., called that a fair solution because “it does not cut benefits for one group of veterans to pay for the benefits of others.” VA home loans are a voluntary program.

The House-passed bill also extends presumptive exposure status to veterans who served in the Korean Peninsula demilitarized zone beginning in September 1967 and lasting until August 1971, the same end date for the Vietnam War.

And the measure makes several additional changes to the VA home loan program, including eliminating the cap on loans department officials can offer.
 

hunybee

Veteran Member
i hope they do this and MUCH more for the vietnam vets. the paltry compensation given to vets that they must fight tooth and nail for is terrible.


then, they should take a look at their children and grandchildren.
 

Chance

Veteran Member
Years ago, Lovelace Medical Center in Albuquerque was chosen to do the the Department of Defenses' big Agent Orange study.

The government literally doubled our hospital lab equipment, doubled our number of medical technologists, hired extra phlebotomists, etc. and flew in all kinds of experts and doctors to follow up on the data collected on these Vietnam veterans - nothing was spared for this study. I mean the best was provided - top notch equipment and doctors involved.

The testing was a boat load of tests and exams, and not just the laboratory - the imaging department was involved, and others - full chem panels, hematology, serology, urinalysis, x-rays, MRIs, etc. - the works all the way to psych evaluations. Lots of doctors and researchers were involved.

And we collected boat loads of data for them - for months.

The veterans were flown in and put up in the Albuquerque airport hotel for 3 days while all the testing went on. Then they were flown back home.

The hospital had a contract with the government that when the testing was all done the hospital could keep ALL of the equipment! We're talking several hundred thousand dollars plus for chemical analyzers, cell counters, imaging equipment, etc and all the maintenance parts, reagents, chemicals, etc. We were even given the OK to purchase the best equipment out there. No expense spared.

Well, I can't recall how many months this went on (I think maybe 6 to 9 months?) when all of a sudden everything came to a screeching halt. No more testing/no more veterans coming in. They whole thing was disbanded. And we got to keep all the brand new equipment.

Found out that whomever designed the experiment didn't have a 'control group' to compare to. (Who doesn't have a control group? Just unheard of - obviously somebody had no clue what they were doing.))

They didn't know who had been exposed to Agent Orange and who hadn't been exposed to Agent Orange.

What a HUGE waste of government (our) money!!! We were shocked that so much went in to planning and organizing and coordinating and contacting veterans and they forgot about a control group.

What a colossal 'goof' for the Department of Defense.

All of that work, data collecting, money spent was for not.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
The VA established a toll-free number, 877-881-7618, for veterans to call when facing billing issues through the Choice program. According to a letter sent last year by 40 lawmakers to the VA about the issue, the agency received more than 57,000 calls between the program’s launch in late 2014 and May 2017 from veterans facing adverse credit reports.

TriWest encouraged veterans to contact them directly so they could investigate and resolve issues. Veterans using the Choice program can reach TriWest at 866-606-81
 

NC Susan

Deceased
http://americanmilitarynews.com/201...em-for-veteran-faced-with-30000-medical-bill/

July 12 2018
Health care administrators remedy problem for veteran faced with $30,000 medical bill

Nikki Wentling - Stars and Stripes

A Vietnam War veteran threatened with a nearly $30,000 medical bill because of a blunder with a Department of Veterans Affairs program was assured this week that he would not be charged.

Bob Hart, 73, uses the VA Choice program to receive medical care at a private hospital close to his home near Jacksonville, Ill. He was informed several weeks ago that he owed the hospital for treatment he thought the VA covered.

TriWest Healthcare Alliance, the third-party administrator that the VA uses to pay private providers through the Choice program in 28 states, said Tuesday that they looked into the situation and remedied the problem.

“The veteran will not be responsible for any of these charges, as his services are all authorized and covered under the Choice program,” TriWest wrote Tuesday in an email.

Hart receives biweekly injections of anti-inflammatory medication at Passavant Area Hospital for a condition linked to exposure to the chemical herbicide Agent Orange. After Hart was told about his growing medical bills, he wondered whether he could continue to receive treatment.

“I don’t know where I stand on this,” he said at the time. “If I don’t get the shots, I’m in trouble. But I can’t lose everything I’ve got.”

Following a Stars and Stripes story on July 3 about Hart’s situation, TriWest CEO David McIntyre called him and promised the error would be fixed, Hart said. Hart, McIntyre and the billing department at Passvant Area Hospital held a conference call on Monday in which the hospital vowed they wouldn’t bill Hart again.

TriWest said there were errors with Hart’s authorization to use the Choice program, which led to delays with his local hospital submitting claims for reimbursement. TriWest “re-educated” Hart’s private providers about how to use the program, the company said.

“All of the claims in question were submitted and are now being processed,” TriWest said.

TriWest described Hart’s situation as “unique,” but other veterans using the Choice program have faced similar problems since the program was created in 2014. When medical facilities experience delays getting reimbursed for treating VA patients, veterans’ medical bills can be sent to debt collectors and their credit reports damaged.

The VA established a toll-free number, 877-881-7618, for veterans to call when facing billing issues through the Choice program. According to a letter sent last year by 40 lawmakers to the VA about the issue, the agency received more than 57,000 calls between the program’s launch in late 2014 and May 2017 from veterans facing adverse credit reports.

TriWest encouraged veterans to contact them directly so they could investigate and resolve issues. Veterans using the Choice program can reach TriWest at 866-606-8198.

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© 2018 the Stars and Stripes
 

Bubble Head

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Agent Orange was brought up through the sea suctions pumps and distilled in the ships evaporators making fresh water from salt water. The crews drank the fresh water with the Agent Orange chemical compounds. Agent Orange does not go away through distillation. Areas in country were sprayed heavily and when it rained the Agent Orange would flow into the river and bays. It would shimmer on the water. The tides took it out and those vessels conducting operations then got into the run off. I am glad they are considering taking care of this issue but it is late in the game for many.

The Choice Program put together under Bam-McCain never worked. It was more a side show to employ people in a third party capacity with no connection to the VA. A lot of Vets have been stuck with bills they thought were covered. The VA didn't really have anything to say about it the way it was structured. A new plan has been approved to straighten out the problems. It will go into effect in 2019 but I would take a caution approach to see how well it was actually fixed.
 
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