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Report to the Ranking Democratic Member, Committee on Veterans' 
Affairs, House of Representatives:

United States Government Accountability Office:

GAO:

January 2005:

Vocational Rehabilitation:

More VA and DOD Collaboration Needed to Expedite Services for Seriously 
Injured Servicemembers:

GAO-05-167:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-05-167, a report to the Ranking Democratic Member, 
Committee on Veterans' Affairs, House of Representatives: 

Why GAO Did This Study:

More than 10,000 U.S. military servicemembers, including National Guard 
and Reserve members, have been injured in the conflicts in Afghanistan 
and Iraq. Those with serious injuries are likely to be discharged from 
the military and return to civilian life with disabilities. The 
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) offers vocational rehabilitation 
and employment (VR&E) services to help these injured servicemembers in 
their transition to civilian employment. GAO has noted that early 
intervention—the provision of rehabilitation services as soon as 
possible after the onset of a disability—is a practice that 
significantly facilitates the return to work. GAO examined how VA 
expedites VR&E services to seriously injured servicemembers and the 
challenges VA faces in its efforts to do so.

What GAO Found:

VA has taken steps to expedite vocational rehabilitation and employment
services for servicemembers returning from Afghanistan and Iraq with 
serious injuries. The agency has instructed its regional offices to 
make seriously injured servicemembers a high priority for all VA 
assistance, including VR&E services, and has asked DOD to provide data 
that would help VA identify and monitor this population. It has also 
deployed additional staff to five major Army military treatment 
facilities where the majority of the seriously injured are treated. 
Pending an agreement with DOD for sharing data, VA has relied on its 
regional offices to learn who the seriously injured are and where they 
are located. We found that the regional offices we reviewed had 
developed information that varied in completeness and reliability. We 
also found that VA does not have a policy for maintaining contact with 
those with serious injuries who may later be ready for VR&E services 
but did not initially apply for VR&E. Nevertheless, some regional 
offices did attempt to maintain contact while other regional offices 
did not.

Seriously Injured Army Servicemembers Receive Treatment at Five Major 
Army Medical Facilities and Relocate to One of 57 VA Regions after 
Medical Stabilization:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

VA faces significant challenges in expediting VR&E services to 
seriously injured servicemembers. These include: the inherent challenge 
that individual differences and uncertainties in the recovery process 
make it difficult to determine when a servicemember will be ready to 
consider VR&E services; DOD’s concerns that VA’s outreach, including 
early intervention with VR&E, could work at cross purposes to military 
retention goals for servicemembers whose discharge from military 
service is not yet certain; and the lack of access to data from DOD 
that would allow VA to readily know which servicemembers are seriously 
injured and where they are located. 

VA and DOD generally concurred with our findings and recommendations.

What GAO Recommends:

GAO recommends that:
* VA and the Department of Defense (DOD) collaborate to reach an 
agreement for VA to have access to information that both agencies 
agree is needed to promote recovery and return to work for seriously 
injured servicemembers. 

* VA develop a policy and procedures for regional offices to maintain 
contact with seriously injured servicemembers who do not initially 
apply for VR&E services.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-167.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Cynthia Bascetta at (202) 
512-7215 or BascettaC@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Contents:

Letter:

Results in Brief:

Background:

VA Has Taken Steps to Expedite Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment 
Services for Seriously Injured Servicemembers:

VA Faces Significant Challenges in Expediting Services to Seriously 
Injured Servicemembers:

Conclusions:

Recommendations:

Agency Comments:

Appendix I: Comments from the Department of Veterans Affairs:

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Defense:

Related GAO Products:

Figures:

Figure 1: Seriously Injured Army Servicemembers Receive Treatment at 
Five Major Army Medical Facilities and Relocate to One of 57 VA Regions 
after Medical Stabilization:

Figure 2: VA's Early Intervention Could Work at Cross Purposes to DOD's 
Retention Evaluation Process:

Abbreviations:

DOD: Department of Defense:

MTF: Military Treatment Facility:

VR&E: Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment:

VA: Department of Veterans Affairs:

United States Government Accountability Office:

Washington, DC 20548:

January 14, 2005:

The Honorable Lane Evans: 
Ranking Democratic Member: 
Committee on Veterans' Affairs: 
House of Representatives:

Dear Mr. Evans:

Since the onset of U.S. operations in Afghanistan in October 2001 and 
Iraq in March 2003, the Department of Defense (DOD) has reported that 
more than 10,000 service men and women have been injured in combat. 
While many return to active duty after they are treated, others who are 
more seriously injured are likely to be discharged from their military 
obligations and return to civilian life with disabilities. In addition 
to cash compensation, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) offers 
vocational rehabilitation and employment (VR&E) services to help 
veterans with disabilities restore their lives and participate in the 
civilian workforce. We have reported that intervening early after a 
disabling injury increases the likelihood that an individual will 
successfully return to work.[Footnote 1] Moreover, there is growing 
awareness that people with disabilities can and want to work and that 
changes in the nature of work and advances in assistive technologies 
help them to do so. Further, as the U.S. workforce is projected to 
shrink, the U.S. economy will need all who are able to participate in 
the paid labor force. Because federal disability programs, including 
VA's, lack emphasis on the potential for vocational rehabilitation to 
return people to work and also rely on outmoded assumptions about the 
relationship between impairment and work, we have designated these as 
"high-risk" programs.[Footnote 2]

In view of the importance of early intervention in returning people who 
have been disabled to work, you asked that we review how quickly VA is 
able to provide VR&E services to seriously injured servicemembers from 
Afghanistan and Iraq who are likely to become veterans with 
disabilities. We assessed (1) how VA expedites VR&E services to these 
seriously injured servicemembers and (2) the challenges VA faces in its 
efforts to do so.

To address these objectives, we reviewed VA's formal and informal 
procedures for expediting VR&E services to seriously injured 
servicemembers returning from Afghanistan and Iraq. We reviewed 
applicable laws and regulations. We interviewed officials at VA's 
central office and at 12 of VA's 57 regional offices. Five of these 
offices are located near the five major Army medical treatment 
facilities treating the majority of the seriously injured Army 
servicemembers: Brooke Army Medical Center at Fort Sam Houston, Texas; 
Darnall Army Community Hospital at Fort Hood, Texas; Eisenhower Army 
Medical Center at Fort Gordon, Georgia; Madigan Army Medical Center at 
Fort Lewis, Washington; and Walter Reed Army Medical Center in 
Washington, D.C. The corresponding VA regional offices are Houston and 
Waco, Texas; Atlanta, Georgia; Seattle, Washington; and Washington, 
D.C. We selected the other seven regional offices based on Army data 
indicating that servicemembers injured in Afghanistan and Iraq are 
being treated at military treatment facilities in their regions. They 
are Buffalo, New York; Denver, Colorado; Muskogee, Oklahoma; Nashville, 
Tennessee; New Orleans, Louisiana; Wichita, Kansas; and Winston-Salem, 
North Carolina. Our findings for these regional offices cannot be 
generalized to all of VA's regional offices. We focused on Army 
servicemembers, including activated National Guard and Reserve, because 
they constituted the majority of servicemembers wounded in Afghanistan 
and Iraq. In addition, we visited Walter Reed Army Medical Center in 
Washington, D.C., where most seriously injured Army servicemembers are 
initially treated. We also interviewed DOD officials about their 
efforts to work with VA on the transition of injured servicemembers 
being discharged from active duty. We conducted our work between April 
2004 and November 2004 in accordance with generally accepted government 
auditing standards.

Results in Brief:

We found that VA has taken steps to expedite VR&E services for 
seriously injured servicemembers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. 
VA has instructed its regional offices to make seriously injured 
servicemembers a high priority for all VA assistance and asked DOD to 
share data that would help VA identify and monitor them. Because most 
seriously injured servicemembers are initially treated at major 
military treatment facilities, VA deployed staff to these sites to 
provide information on VA benefits programs, including VR&E services, 
to servicemembers injured in the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq. To 
ensure the identification and monitoring of all seriously injured 
servicemembers, VA initiated a memorandum of agreement proposing that 
DOD systematically provide information on them, including their names, 
location, and medical condition. Pending an agreement with DOD, VA 
instructed its regional offices to establish local liaison with 
military medical treatment facilities in their areas to learn who the 
seriously injured are, where they are located, and the severity of 
their injuries. Reliance on local relationships, however, has resulted 
in varying completeness and reliability of information developed by the 
12 regional offices in our review. We also found that VA has no policy 
for VR&E staff to maintain contact with seriously injured 
servicemembers who do not apply for VR&E services. Nevertheless, some 
offices reported efforts to maintain contact with these servicemembers, 
noting that some who are not initially ready to consider employment 
when contacted about VR&E services may be receptive at a future time.

We found significant challenges to VA's efforts to expedite VR&E 
services. An inherent challenge is that individual differences and 
uncertainties in the recovery process make it difficult to determine 
when a seriously injured service member will be ready to consider VR&E 
services. Additionally, given that VA is conducting outreach to 
servicemembers whose discharge from military service is not yet 
certain, VA is challenged by DOD's concerns that VA's outreach about 
benefits, including early intervention with VR&E services, could work 
at cross purposes to the military's retention goals. Finally, VA is 
currently challenged by a lack of access to DOD data that would, at a 
minimum, allow the agency to readily identify and locate all seriously 
injured servicemembers. VA officials we interviewed both in the 
regional offices and at the central office reported that this 
information would provide them with a more reliable way to identify and 
monitor the progress of those servicemembers with serious injuries. 
However, DOD officials reported that they have privacy concerns about 
the type of information that VA had requested and the time that VA 
wants it to be provided.

To improve VA's efforts to expedite VR&E services, we recommend that VA 
and DOD collaborate to reach agreement about information that VA needs 
to promote the recovery and return to work of seriously injured 
servicemembers and that VA develop a policy and procedures for 
maintaining contact with those who do not initially apply for VR&E 
services. VA and DOD provided written comments on a draft of this 
report. Both VA and DOD generally concurred with our findings and 
recommendations.

Background:

VA's VR&E program is designed to ensure that veterans with disabilities 
find meaningful work and achieve maximum independence in daily living. 
In 2004, VA estimates that it spent more than $670 million on its VR&E 
program to serve about 73,000 participants. This represents about 2 
percent of VA's $37 billion budget for nonmedical benefits, most of 
which involves cash compensation for veterans with disabilities.

VR&E services include vocational counseling, evaluation, and training 
that can include payment for tuition and other expenses for education, 
as well as job placement assistance. Interested veterans generally 
apply for VR&E services after they have applied and qualified for 
disability compensation based on a rating of their service-connected 
disability. This disability rating--ranging from 0 to 100 percent in 10 
percent increments--entitles veterans to monthly cash payments based on 
their average loss in earning capacity resulting from a service-
connected injury or combination of injuries. To be entitled to VR&E 
services, veterans with disabilities generally must have at least a 20 
percent disability rating and an employment handicap as determined by a 
vocational rehabilitation counselor. Although cash compensation is not 
available to servicemembers until after they separate from the 
military, they can receive VR&E services prior to separation under 
certain circumstances.[Footnote 3] To make these services available 
prior to discharge, VA expedites the determination of eligibility for 
VR&E by granting a preliminary rating, known as a memorandum rating.

VA's outreach to servicemembers who plan to apply for veterans' 
disability compensation has been part of its transition assistance 
program, which was established in 1990.[Footnote 4] Either in group 
sessions or in one-on-one encounters, VA provides servicemembers with 
information about disability benefits and services, which includes the 
VR&E program, and offers assistance in applying for them. In addition, 
VA administers a pre-discharge program that expedites the disability 
compensation claims processing for servicemembers who are pending 
discharge. This program also helps VR&E staff identify those who could 
benefit from vocational rehabilitation and employment services. VA has 
recently included activated National Guard and Reserve members in its 
outreach efforts.

Servicemembers injured in Iraq and Afghanistan are surviving injuries 
that would have been fatal in past conflicts, due, in part, to advanced 
protective equipment and medical treatment. However, the severity of 
their injuries can result in a lengthy transition from injured 
servicemember to veteran. Initially, most seriously injured 
servicemembers, including activated National Guard and Reserve members, 
are brought to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany for 
treatment. From there, they are transported to the appropriate U.S. 
medical facilities, which are usually major military treatment 
facilities (MTFs) but may also be VA medical centers. According to DOD 
officials, once stabilized and discharged from the hospital, 
servicemembers usually relocate to be closer to their homes or military 
bases and are treated as outpatients by the closest VA or military 
hospital. (See fig. 1.) At this point, the military generally begins to 
assess whether the servicemember will be able to remain in the 
military, a process that could take months to complete. The process can 
take even longer if the servicemember appeals the military's initial 
disability decision.

Figure 1: Seriously Injured Army Servicemembers Receive Treatment at 
Five Major Army Medical Facilities and Relocate to One of 57 VA Regions 
after Medical Stabilization:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

In response to recommendations made by the VA Vocational Rehabilitation 
and Employment Task Force, VA is beginning to change its approach to 
VR&E to better reflect contemporary views of disability. The Secretary 
of Veterans Affairs established this external task force in 2003 to 
conduct a comprehensive review of VA's VR&E program.[Footnote 5] In 
addition, faced with the immediate need to provide benefits and 
services to a new generation of veterans with disabilities, VA in 
August 2003 formed an internal task force to develop and implement 
policies to improve the transition of injured servicemembers back to 
civilian life. Known as the Seamless Transition Task Force, it included 
ad hoc participation from DOD.[Footnote 6] Although this task force's 
initial priority was to ensure the continuity of medical care for 
injured servicemembers as they transition from military to VA health 
care, it has also coordinated efforts to ensure access to all other VA 
benefits, including VR&E services.

We have previously reported on the importance of early intervention to 
maximize the work potential of individuals with disabilities. We have 
also reported, however, that current federal disability programs offer 
little opportunity for early intervention with individuals who apply 
for compensation. These programs require lengthy assessments in which 
applicants must focus on demonstrating their work limitations rather 
than their abilities and potential to work.[Footnote 7] Consequently, 
vocational rehabilitation is typically introduced late in the process. 
Furthermore, we have designated federal disability programs, including 
VA's, as high-risk programs because they lack emphasis on the potential 
for vocational rehabilitation to return people to work and also rely on 
outmoded assumptions about the relationship between impairment and 
work.

VA Has Taken Steps to Expedite Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment 
Services for Seriously Injured Servicemembers:

VA has instructed its regional offices to make seriously injured 
servicemembers a high priority for all VA assistance and asked DOD to 
provide data that would ensure VA's ability to identify and monitor 
this population. Because many seriously injured servicemembers are 
initially treated at major military treatment facilities, VA has 
deployed staff to these sites to provide information on all veterans' 
benefits, including VR&E services. To ensure the identification and 
monitoring of all seriously injured servicemembers, VA initiated a 
memorandum of agreement proposing that DOD share a range of 
information, including the names of those with serious injuries, their 
medical condition, and their military status. As of December 2004, a 
formal agreement with DOD had not been reached. In the meantime, VA has 
instructed its regional offices to develop local liaison with DOD in 
order to identify and assist seriously injured servicemembers. The 12 
regional offices we reviewed have developed information of varying 
completeness and reliability. However, once regional offices have 
identified and contacted seriously injured servicemembers, VA has no 
policy for VR&E staff to maintain contact with those individuals who do 
not apply for VR&E services while in the hospital or after they return 
home. Nevertheless, some regional offices reported maintaining contact 
with these servicemembers while others did not.

VA Has Instructed Its Regional Offices to Make Seriously Injured 
Servicemembers a High Priority and Asked DOD for Data to Help Identify 
Them:

In a September 2003 letter, VA instructed its regional offices to 
provide priority consideration and assistance to seriously injured 
servicemembers returning from Afghanistan and Iraq. VA specifically 
instructed regional offices to focus on servicemembers whose 
disabilities are definitely or likely to result in military separation. 
Minimally, this includes servicemembers with injuries DOD has 
classified as "very serious," "serious," or in a "special 
category."[Footnote 8] In this letter, VA instructed its regional 
offices to assign a case manager to each seriously injured 
servicemember who applies for disability compensation. In addition, VA 
noted the particular importance of early intervention for those who are 
seriously injured and emphasized that seriously injured servicemembers 
applying for VR&E should receive the fastest possible service. 
Moreover, VA reminded VR&E staff that they can initiate evaluation and 
counseling and, in some cases, authorize training before a 
servicemember is discharged.

Since most seriously injured servicemembers are initially treated at 
major MTFs, VA has detailed staff to these facilities.[Footnote 9] 
These staff have included VA social workers and disability compensation 
benefits counselors. In addition to these staff, at Walter Reed, where 
the largest number of seriously injured servicemembers has been 
treated, VA's Washington D.C. regional office has since 2001 provided a 
vocational rehabilitation counselor to work with hospitalized patients.

To identify and monitor those whose injuries may result in a need for 
VA services, including vocational rehabilitation, VA has asked DOD to 
share data about injured servicemembers. VA has been working to develop 
a formal agreement with DOD on what specific information to share. In 
the spring of 2004, VA submitted a draft memorandum of agreement to 
DOD's Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs 
proposing that DOD provide lists of all injured servicemembers admitted 
to MTFs. In addition, VA requested personal identifying information, 
medical information, and DOD's injury classification for each listed 
servicemember. VA also requested monthly lists of servicemembers being 
evaluated for medical separation from military service. Several VA 
officials and regional office staff we interviewed said that systematic 
information from DOD would provide them with a way to more reliably 
identify and monitor seriously injured servicemembers. As of December 
2004, a formal agreement with DOD was still pending.

VA Regional Offices Have Relied on Local Liaisons with MTFs In Order to 
Identify Seriously Injured Servicemembers Who May Need Assistance:

In the absence of a formal arrangement to ensure that DOD provides data 
on seriously injured servicemembers, VA has relied on its regional 
offices to obtain information about them. In its September 2003 letter, 
the agency asked the regional offices to coordinate with staff at MTFs 
and VA medical centers in their areas to ascertain the identities, 
medical conditions, and military status of the seriously injured. While 
VA officials reported to us that they had provided veterans' benefits 
information to injured servicemembers, they did not have complete and 
reliable data as to how many of these were seriously injured.

In response to guidance by VA's central office, every regional office 
has designated a coordinator to serve as a point of contact with MTFs 
and VA medical centers, as well as other VA regional offices, in order 
to monitor injured servicemembers as they relocate across the country. 
When servicemembers are discharged from an MTF, VA officials told us 
that the affiliated VA regional office coordinator notifies the 
coordinator in the region to which the person relocates. The new 
coordinator contacts the seriously injured servicemember to discuss any 
claims that have been filed and to provide those who have not already 
done so an opportunity to apply for other benefits, including VR&E 
services. Regional officials we interviewed reported that they have 
followed VA's instructions to keep updated logs of all contacts they 
have with seriously injured servicemembers. Regional offices are 
required to send these logs to VA's central office, which uses them to 
monitor outreach.

In our review of 12 regional offices, we found that they have developed 
different information sources resulting in varying levels of 
information on seriously injured servicemembers. The nature of the 
local relationships between VA staff and military staff at MTFs was a 
key factor in the completeness and reliability of the information that 
the military provided. For example, the military MTF staff at one 
regional office provided VA staff with only the names of new patients 
with no indication of the severity of their condition or the theater 
from which they were returning. Another regional office reported 
receiving lists of servicemembers for whom the Army has initiated a 
medical separation in addition to lists of patients with information on 
the severity of their injuries. Some regional offices were able to 
capitalize on longstanding informal relationships. For example, the VA 
coordinator responsible for identifying and monitoring the seriously 
injured at one regional office had served as an Army nurse at the local 
MTF and was provided all pertinent information. In contrast, staff at 
another regional office reported that local military staff did not 
until recently provide them with information on seriously injured 
servicemembers admitted to the MTF.

Once they have identified the seriously injured servicemembers, 
regional office staff reported that they are largely following 
outreach, coordination, and case management procedures outlined in VA's 
September 2003 guidance. Under these procedures, disability 
compensation benefit counselors usually conduct VA's initial outreach 
by contacting hospitalized servicemembers to provide information on all 
veterans' benefits, including VR&E. Traditionally responsible for 
taking applications and processing disability compensation claims, 
these staff members are neither vocational rehabilitation experts nor 
are they generally trained to work with persons who have serious 
injuries. Accordingly, VA reported that it has begun requiring all 
staff members who provide in-person or telephone outreach to receive 
training on how to interact with seriously injured servicemembers. VR&E 
staff reported that they generally rely on the benefits counselors to 
notify them of injured servicemembers at MTFs who are interested in or 
who apply for VR&E. Only then would a vocational rehabilitation 
counselor or counseling psychologist usually contact the hospitalized 
servicemember to begin counseling and evaluation. In one regional 
office, VR&E staff said that they do not contact injured servicemembers 
until they apply for services and obtain a memorandum rating 
establishing their eligibility.

The Washington, D.C. regional office has assigned a vocational 
rehabilitation counselor to be available on site at Walter Reed Army 
Medical Center, where a large number of seriously injured 
servicemembers are treated. Although VA also deployed benefits 
counselors to Walter Reed who are responsible for outreach activities 
and the provision of information on all VA benefits, the VR&E counselor 
works with hospitalized patients specifically to offer and provide 
vocational counseling and evaluation. She reported attempting to 
contact all patients within 48 hours of their arrival and visiting them 
routinely thereafter to establish rapport. Her primary mission is to 
work with servicemembers who will need to prepare for civilian 
employment, although she told us that her early intervention efforts 
could also help servicemembers who are able to remain in the military.

According to VA staff, many seriously injured servicemembers are not 
ready or able to consider VR&E services when they are first contacted. 
Yet, we found that VA has no policy for maintaining contact with those 
servicemembers who do not apply for VR&E services when they were in the 
hospital or when they returned to a home base or to their residence. 
Several regional offices reported that they do not stay in contact with 
these individuals while others attempt to do so in various ways. One 
office said it is considering contacting them after one year. Another 
regional VR&E officer reported that staff ask the servicemembers to 
specify when they would like to be contacted for further information or 
to begin program participation. Staff at this regional office noted 
that they are strong advocates of early intervention. They said that 
they try to contact servicemembers as soon as possible to establish 
rapport and provide VR&E program information even before the 
servicemembers are physically ready to begin developing a vocational 
rehabilitation plan. At the same time, they noted that readiness to 
participate in VR&E varies by individual and that professional judgment 
is required to balance effective outreach with an approach that could 
be viewed as intrusive.

VR&E program officials noted the potential value of maintaining contact 
with seriously injured servicemembers who may not initially be ready to 
participate when initially contacted by VA, but they also recognized 
the need to focus resources on those who do participate. Nevertheless, 
officials from a veterans service organization told us that it is 
critical to maintain contact with seriously injured veterans who do not 
initially apply for VR&E because they may need months or even years 
before they are ready. In our prior work, we have also noted that 
maintaining contact with individuals who have disabilities may help 
encourage their return to work.[Footnote 10]

VA Faces Significant Challenges in Expediting Services to Seriously 
Injured Servicemembers:

While experts and advocates for individuals with disabilities attest to 
the value of early intervention for returning people to work, VA is 
challenged to reach injured servicemembers early for several reasons. 
First, determining the best time to approach recently injured 
servicemembers and gauge their personal receptivity to consider 
employment in the civilian sector is inherently difficult. The nature 
of the recovery process is highly individualized and requires 
professional judgment to determine the appropriate time to begin 
vocational rehabilitation. Further, because VA is trying to prepare 
servicemembers who are still on active duty for a transition to 
civilian life, DOD is concerned that VA's efforts may be working at 
cross purposes to the military's retention goals. Finally, because VA 
lacks systematic information from DOD on seriously injured 
servicemembers, VA cannot ensure that all servicemembers and veterans 
who could benefit from the VR&E program have the opportunity to receive 
services at the appropriate time.

Individual Differences in the Recovery Process Complicate the Timing of 
Early Intervention:

Individual differences and uncertainties in the recovery process make 
it inherently difficult to determine when a seriously injured 
servicemember will be ready to consider vocational rehabilitation. 
Since the appropriate time to intervene depends to a large extent on 
the individual's medical condition and personal readiness, the time to 
broach the subject of a return to work, whether in the military or the 
civilian labor force, will vary. Regional office staff reported that 
many servicemembers are eager to return to military duty and do not 
intend to consider a career outside military service. They also 
reported that many injured servicemembers need time to recover and 
adjust to the likelihood that they may have to leave the military and 
prepare for civilian employment.

Because of the individual differences in receptivity to VR&E, VA staff 
reported needing to monitor the condition of seriously injured 
servicemembers and to engage them more than once during their recovery 
to be able to gauge their readiness for VR&E. One regional VR&E 
official told us that VA could benefit from more collaboration with DOD 
medical staff in order to make decisions on the appropriate timing of 
VR&E intervention. The vocational rehabilitation counselor at Walter 
Reed reported visiting servicemembers routinely, including evenings and 
weekends, so that she would be available when they were ready to 
discuss their need for vocational rehabilitation. For one patient, she 
reported visiting him 12 times before he expressed interest in VR&E. In 
some locations, VA staff reported participating in pre-discharge 
planning meetings with military and medical staff, which they said 
helped them stay informed about the servicemember's condition and 
likely discharge and provided an opportunity to include VR&E in their 
discharge planning.

VA Is Challenged by DOD's Concern that Early Intervention Could Work at 
Cross Purposes to Military Retention:

VA is also challenged by DOD's concern that outreach about VA benefits, 
including disability compensation and VR&E services, could work at 
cross purposes to military retention goals. In particular, DOD 
expressed concern about the timing of VA's outreach to servicemembers 
whose discharge from military service is not yet certain. To expedite 
VR&E services, VA's outreach process may overlap with the military's 
process for evaluating servicemembers for a possible return to duty. 
According to DOD officials, it may be premature for VA to begin working 
with injured servicemembers who may eventually return to active duty. 
(See fig. 2.) With advances in medicine and prosthetic devices, many 
serious injuries no longer result in work-related impairments. Army 
officials who track injured servicemembers told us that many seriously 
injured servicemembers overcome their injuries and return to active 
duty. Recognizing this potential, both Congress[Footnote 11] and the 
President have recently expressed interest in seeing the military 
provide the retraining needed to support the return of injured 
servicemembers to their military occupations or other occupations 
within the military if possible. In an attempt to enable more amputees 
to return to active duty, Walter Reed Army Medical Center plans to open 
a new rehabilitation center in 2005.

Both VA and DOD officials suggested that the earliest appropriate time 
for VA to intervene for regular active duty servicemembers would be 
when it is clear that the servicemember will not be retained by the 
military. Currently, VA can only provide VR&E services to active duty 
servicemembers who are pending discharge due to a disability. VR&E 
services could begin earlier for injured members of the National Guard 
and Reserve since these individuals usually expect to return to their 
previous civilian employment. They may need VR&E services to return to 
their prior employment or to prepare for a different occupation in the 
civilian economy.

Figure 2: VA's Early Intervention Could Work at Cross Purposes to DOD's 
Retention Evaluation Process:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

VA Is Also Challenged by the Lack of Access to Systematic Data 
Regarding Seriously Injured Servicemembers:

In the absence of a formal information sharing agreement with DOD, VA 
does not have systematic access to DOD data about the population who 
may need its services. Specifically, VA cannot reliably identify all 
seriously injured servicemembers or know with certainty when they are 
medically stabilized, when they are undergoing evaluation for a medical 
discharge, or when they are actually medically discharged from the 
military. VA has instead had to rely on ad hoc regional office 
arrangements at the local level to identify and obtain specific data 
about seriously injured servicemembers. While regional office staff 
generally expressed confidence that the information sources they 
developed enabled them to identify most seriously injured 
servicemembers, they have no official data source from DOD with which 
to confirm the completeness and reliability of their data nor can they 
provide reasonable assurance that some seriously injured servicemembers 
have not been overlooked. In addition, informal data sharing 
relationships could break down with changes in personnel at either the 
MTF or the regional office.

DOD officials expressed their concerns about the type of information to 
be shared and when the information would be shared. DOD noted that it 
needed to comply with legal privacy rules on sharing individual patient 
information.[Footnote 12] DOD officials told us that information could 
be made available to VA "upon separation" from military service, that 
is, when a servicemember enters the separation process. At this time, 
servicemembers would undergo assessment by a physical evaluation board, 
which DOD officials said typically takes between 30 to 90 days and 
usually results in a medical discharge from the military. However, 
prior to separation, information can only be provided under certain 
circumstances, such as when a patient's authorization is 
obtained.[Footnote 13]

Conclusions:

VA has taken steps to help the nation's newest generation of veterans 
move forward with their lives, particularly those who return from 
combat with disabling injuries. VA has made seriously injured 
servicemembers a priority and, among other measures, deployed staff to 
major MTFs to conduct outreach to them prior to separation. However, VA 
benefits counselors are usually the first VA representatives to contact 
injured servicemembers. While they may provide an overview of all VA 
benefits, they may not emphasize vocational rehabilitation and 
employment services.

The importance of early intervention for returning individuals with 
disabilities to the workforce is well documented in the vocational 
rehabilitation literature. However, the lack of an agreement with DOD 
for systematic data sharing impedes VA's attempt to identify all 
seriously injured servicemembers who might benefit from such 
intervention. It also poses the risk that some who are discharged with 
disabilities may be overlooked and not afforded the opportunity for 
VR&E. As VA recognizes, the current ad hoc approach of their regional 
offices for obtaining information is not the most efficient way to 
proceed. Furthermore, because individuals with disabilities vary in 
their readiness and need for VR&E services, maintaining contact with 
them would better ensure that VR&E staff know when the person is ready 
to participate. Because VA has no policy for maintaining contact with 
those who do not apply for VR&E, opportunities to rehabilitate veterans 
who have sustained serious injuries in Afghanistan and Iraq may be 
lost.

At a time when the U.S. labor force is projected to shrink, it is 
imperative that those who can work, whether in military or civilian 
jobs, are well supported in their efforts to do so. VA's early VR&E 
efforts, rather than working at cross purposes to DOD goals, could 
facilitate servicemembers' return to the same or different military 
occupation, or to a civilian occupation, if they were not able to 
remain in the military. In this regard, the prospect for early 
intervention with VR&E services presents both a challenge and an 
opportunity for VA and DOD to collaborate to provide better outcomes 
for this new generation of seriously injured servicemembers.

Recommendations:

To improve VA's efforts to expedite VR&E services to seriously injured 
servicemembers, we recommend that VA and DOD collaborate to reach an 
agreement for VA to have access to information that both agencies agree 
is needed to promote servicemembers' recovery and return to work.

We also recommend that the Secretary of Veterans Affairs direct the 
Under Secretary for Benefits to develop a policy and procedures for 
regional offices to maintain contact with seriously injured 
servicemembers who do not initially apply for VR&E services, in order 
to ensure that they have the opportunity to participate in the program 
when they are ready.

Agency Comments:

In commenting on a draft of this report, VA concurred with our findings 
and recommendations. VA emphasized that access to DOD information is 
crucial to promoting servicemembers' recovery and return to work and, 
to that end, is currently negotiating an agreement to allow VA to 
obtain protected medical information on servicemembers prior to their 
discharge for VA benefits purposes. In addition, VA noted that its 
follow-up policies and procedures include sending veterans information 
on VR&E benefits upon notification of a disability compensation award 
and 60 days later. However, we believe a more individualized approach, 
such as maintaining personal contact, could better ensure the 
opportunity for veterans to participate in the program when they are 
ready. VA noted that it is currently reviewing its outreach and follow-
up procedures for injured servicemembers and will make any appropriate 
revisions. VA's written comments are reprinted in appendix I.

DOD also concurred with our findings and recommendations. DOD stated 
its commitment to retaining seriously injured servicemembers who are 
able and willing to return to duty. DOD also noted that a draft 
memorandum of agreement for information sharing between VA and DOD is 
under consideration by the two departments and the military services. 
DOD's written comments are reprinted in appendix II.

As agreed with your office, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution of this report 
until 30 days after the date of this letter. We will then send copies 
of this report to the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, the Secretary of 
Defense, appropriate congressional committees, and other interested 
parties. The report will also be available on GAO's Web site at http:/
/www.gao.gov.

If you or your staff have any questions regarding this report, please 
call me at (202) 512-7215 or Irene Chu, Assistant Director, at (202) 
512-7102.

Susan Bernstein, Connie Peebles Barrow, Margaret Boeckmann, William 
R. Chatlos, Clarette Kim, Joseph J. Natalicchio, and Roger Thomas also 
made key contributions to this report.

Sincerely yours,

Signed by: 

Cynthia A. Bascetta: 
Director, Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues:

[End of section]

Appendix I: Comments from the Department of Veterans Affairs:

THE SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS: 
WASHINGTON:

January 7, 2005:
Ms. Cynthia Bascetta: 
Director:
Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues: 
U. S. Government Accountability Office:
441 G Street, NW: 
Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Ms. Bascetta:

The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has reviewed the Government 
Accountability Office's (GAO) draft report, VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION: 
More VA and DOD Collaboration Needed to Expedite Services for Seriously 
Injured Servicemembers, (GAO-05-167). VA concurs with GAO's findings 
and recommendations. Further discussion is included in the enclosure.

VA appreciates the opportunity to comment on your draft report.

Sincerely yours,

Signed by: 

Anthony J. Principi:

Enclosure:

DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS (VA) COMMENTS TO GOVERNMENT 
ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE (GAO) DRAFT REPORT, VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION: 
More VA and DOD Collaboration Needed to Expedite Services for Seriously 
Injured Servicemembers (GAO-05-167):

To improve VA's efforts to expedite VR&E services to seriously injured 
servicemembers, we recommend that VA and DOD collaborate to reach an 
agreement for VA to have access to information that both agencies agree 
is needed to promote servicemembers' recovery and return to work.

Concur-The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) concurs with this 
finding and recommendation. VA recognizes that access to DoD 
information is crucial to promote servicemembers' recovery and return 
to work. VA has been working closely with DoD with a goal of providing 
a seamless transition to all servicemembers who will enter the VA 
system. To that end, a Memorandum of Understanding is currently being 
negotiated that will allow VA to obtain from DoD the servicemembers' 
protected medical information prior to discharge from service. VA's 
Office of General Counsel is confident that there are exceptions in the 
Privacy Rule that permit service medical information to be disclosed 
for VA benefits purposes and has pressed the case with DoD's General 
Counsel.

We, also recommend that the Secretary of Veterans Affairs direct the 
Under Secretary for Benefits to develop a policy and procedures for 
regional offices to maintain contact with seriously injured 
servicemembers who do not initially apply for VR&E services, in order 
to ensure that they have the opportunity to participate in the program 
when they are ready.

Concur-VA concurs with this finding and recommendation. VBA has 
developed specific policies and procedures that address outreach and 
follow-up activities for injured servicemembers, including those that 
do not file a claim for Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment (VR&E) 
benefits during their initial contacts with VA. That guidance is 
contained in Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA) Letter 20-03-36. A 
brief outline of those activities follows.

Enclosure:

DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS (VA) COMMENTS TO GOVERNMENT 
ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE (GAO) DRAFT REPORT, VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION: 
More VA and DOD Collaboration Needed to Expedite Services for Seriously 
Injured Servicemembers (GAO-05-167):

First, the regional office director will contact the servicemember when 
he or she arrives in the regional office's jurisdiction. Regional 
offices have Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom 
coordinators and case managers. The coordinator ensures that the 
injured servicemember is personally provided information on all VA 
benefits and services. The coordinator enters information on the 
servicemember into a tracking log and establishes a diary for follow-up 
activity.

When a claim for compensation is received, a Veterans Service Center 
case manager is assigned to that case. The case manager contacts the 
veteran and again reviews all benefits and services available through 
VA, including VR&E benefits. Compensation is awarded after the 
servicemember is discharged from the military. When the veteran 
receives his or her first disability compensation award, VA sends 
another application for VR&E benefits along with information explaining 
the program. The case is diaried for follow-up in 60 days. If no 
application for vocational rehabilitation and employment benefits is 
received by the end of the 60 days, VR&E sends a motivation packet to 
the veteran.

VBA is currently reviewing all policies and procedures contained in VBA 
Letter 20-03-36, and will revise them as determined appropriate. 

[End of section]

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Defense:

THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE:
HEALTH AFFAIRS:

WASHINGTON, D C 20301-1200:

JAN 04 2005:

Ms. Cynthia A. Bascetta: 
Director, Health Care-Veterans' Health and Benefits Issues:
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street. N.W:
Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Ms. Bascetta:

This is the Department of Defense (DoD) response to the Government 
Accountability Office (GAO) draft report, "VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION 
More VA and DoD Collaboration Needed to Expedite Services for Seriously 
Inured Servicemembers," dated January 2004 (GAO Code 130370/GAO-05-
167).

DoD appreciates the opportunity to comment on the draft report and 
concurs with the GAO findings and recommendations with the attached 
comments.

Please direct any questions to my points of contact on this matter, Mr. 
Kenneth Cox (functional) at (703) 681-0039, ext. 3602 and Mr Gunther J. 
Zimmerman (Audit Liaison) at (703) 681-3492 ext 4065.

Sincerely,

Signed by: 

William Winkenwerder, Jr., MD:

Enclosures.

1. Overall Comments:

2 Technical Comments:

GAO DRAFT REPORT - DATED DECMEBER 14, 2004 (GAO CODE-130370/GAO-05-
167):

"VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION: More VA and DoD Collaboration Needed to 
Expedite Services for Seriously Injured Servicemembers:

DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE COMMENTS Technical Comments:

No technical comments received from the Services to date.

GAO DRAFT REPORT - DATED DECEMBER 14, 2004 (GAO CODE-130370/GAO-05-
167):

"VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION: More VA and DoD Collaboration Needed to 
Expedite Services for Seriously Injured Servicemembers:

DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE COMMENTS:

This draft report provides a review of the Department of Veterans' 
Affairs efforts to provide rehabilitative services and employment 
retraining to active duty members injured in Operation Enduring 
Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Overall Comments:

* The Government Accountability Office (GAO) report accurately depicts 
the Department of Defense's (DoD) commitment to retaining seriously 
injured servicemembers who have the potential and the desire to be 
returned to duty whenever possible.

* The GAO reports that the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is also 
challenged by lack of access to systematic data regarding seriously 
injured Service members. GAO recommends that the two departments 
"collaborate to reach an agreement for VA to have access to information 
that both agencies agree is needed to promote recovery and return to 
work for seriously injured Service members."

DoD is collaborating with VA to develop a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) 
establishing responsibilities for each department regarding the sharing 
of personal health information data in such a manner that it supports 
the seamless transition of Service members and is in compliance with 
applicable Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act privacy 
requirements. At the time of this draft report, a draft of the MOA has 
been developed and is being coordinated with relevant subject matter 
experts in both departments and the military services.

* DoD offers the technical comments on the following page.

[End of section]

Related GAO Products:

VA and Defense Health Care: More Information Needed to Determine if VA 
Can Meet an Increase in Demand for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder 
Services. GAO-04-1069. Washington, D.C.: September 20, 2004.

VA Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment Program: GAO Comments on 
Key Task Force Findings and Recommendations. GAO-04-853. Washington, 
D.C.: June 15, 2004.

VA Benefits: Fundamental Changes to VA's Disability Criteria Need 
Careful Consideration. GAO-03-1172T. Washington, D.C.: September 23, 
2003.

High-Risk Series: An Update. GAO-03-119. Washington, D.C.: January 
2003.

Major Management Challenges and Program Risks: Department of Veterans 
Affairs. GAO-03-110. Washington, D.C.: January 2003.

SSA and VA Disability Programs: Re-Examination of Disability Criteria 
Needed to Help Ensure Program Integrity. GAO-02-597. Washington, D.C.: 
August 9, 2002.

Military and Veterans' Benefits: Observations on the Transition 
Assistance Program. GAO-02-914T. Washington, D.C.: July 18, 2002.

SSA Disability: Other Programs May Provide Lessons from Improving 
Return-to-Work Efforts. GAO-01-153. Washington, D.C.: January 12, 2001.

Vocational Rehabilitation: Opportunities to Improve Program 
Effectiveness. GAO/T-HEHS-98-87. Washington, D.C.: February 4, 1998.

Veterans Benefits Administration: Focusing on Results in Vocational 
Rehabilitation and Education Programs. GAO/T-HEHS-97-148. Washington, 
D.C.: June 5, 1997.

Vocational Rehabilitation: VA Continues to Place Few Disabled Veterans 
in Jobs. GAO/HEHS-96-155. Washington, D.C.: September 3, 1996.

SSA Disability: Return-to-Work Strategies From Other Systems May 
Improve Federal Programs. GAO/HEHS-96-133. Washington, D.C: July 11, 
1996.

SSA Disability: Program Redesign Necessary to Encourage Return to Work. 
GAO/HEHS-96-62. Washington, D.C.: April 24, 1996.

FOOTNOTES

[1] GAO, SSA Disability: Return-to-Work Strategies From Other Systems 
May Improve Federal Programs, GAO-96-133 (Washington, D.C.: July 11, 
1996).

[2] GAO, High-Risk Series: An Update, GAO-03-119 (Washington, D.C.: 
Jan. 2003).

[3] Hospitalized military personnel pending discharge may receive all 
vocational rehabilitation and employment benefits--such as counseling, 
evaluation, and training--except for the monthly subsistence allowance. 
38 U.S.C. §§ 3102, 3104, and 3113.

[4] GAO, Military and Veterans' Benefits: Observations on the 
Transition Assistance Program, GAO-02-914T (Washington, D.C.: July 18, 
2002).

[5] VA Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment Task Force. Report to 
the Secretary of Veterans Affairs: The Vocational Rehabilitation and 
Employment Program for the 21st Century Veteran (Washington, D.C.: 
March 2004).

[6] DOD has supported transition assistance in various ways. For 
example, the VA/DOD Joint Executive Committee was established in 
February 2002 to further promote collaboration between the two 
agencies, including resolving obstacles to information sharing. The 
committee is chaired by the Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs and 
the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness. In 
addition, the Army--in cooperation with VA--established the Disabled 
Soldier Support System (DS3) in April 2004 as an advocacy group and 
information clearinghouse to clarify the services available to disabled 
soldiers as they transition to civilian life.

[7] GAO, SSA Disability: Program Redesign Necessary to Encourage Return 
to Work, GAO/HEHS-96-62 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 24, 1996).

[8] Army regulations classify illness and injuries as "very serious" 
when life is imminently endangered; as "serious" when there is a cause 
for immediate concern but there is no imminent danger to life; and as 
"special category" when the patient has a particular condition, such as 
loss of limb or sight, a psychiatric condition, paralysis, or a 
permanent disfigurement.

[9] These six facilities are Brooke Army Medical Center in Texas; 
Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C; Madigan Army 
Medical Center in Washington; Darnall Army Community Hospital in Texas; 
Eisenhower Army Medical Center in Georgia; and the Bethesda Naval 
Medical Center in Maryland. We focused on the five Army medical 
treatment facilities.

[10] GAO, SSA Disability: Return-to-Work Strategies From Other Systems 
May Improve Federal Programs, GAO/HEHS-96-133 (Washington, D.C: July 
11, 1996).

[11] Congress expressed its sense that the Secretary of Defense should 
develop protocols that include options for injured servicemembers who 
are highly motivated to return to active duty service and for them to 
be retrained to perform military missions for which they are fully 
capable. Ronald W. Reagan National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2005, Pub. L. No. 108-375, § 588, Oct. 28, 2004, the "Sense of 
Congress Regarding Return of Members to Active Duty Service upon 
Rehabilitation from Service-Related Injuries."

[12] Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) 
Privacy Rule, 45 C.F.R. Parts 160 and 164.

[13] 45 C.F.R. § 164.508(a).

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