July 25, 2007

Senator Clinton Applauds Unanimous Senate Approval of Bill to Help Wounded Servicemembers

Washington, DC – Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton today applauded unanimous Senate approval of the Dignified Treatment of Wounded Warriors Act. The bill contains a series of provisions offered by Senator Clinton from her Heroes at Home Act of 2007, Bridging the Gap for Wounded Warriors Act and Restoring Disability Benefits for Injured and Wounded Warriors Act, among others, to address problems facing our wounded servicemembers. The Dignified Treatment of Wounded Warriors Act was originally approved as an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act, but instead was unanimously approved today as a stand alone bill.

“This is a critical step toward meeting our responsibility to our servicemembers to provide the healthcare and support they need. I am proud that the Senate has recognized the importance of measures I put forward to improve screening for Traumatic Brain Injury, the signature wound of the war in Iraq; address problems servicemembers are facing as they transition between DoD and VA healthcare systems; and cut red tape preventing wounded servicemembers from receiving needed disability benefits. Our servicemembers and their families have sacrificed so much for our country, it is only right to provide them with the quality care and support they deserve,” said Senator Clinton.

The Dignified Treatment of Wounded Warriors Act includes Senator Clinton’s provisions to:

  • Mandate that the Department of Defense implement a screening protocol for Traumatic Brain Injury within 180 days. This builds on another measure that Senator Clinton secured in the Dignified Treatment of Wounded Warriors Act, first introduced as part of her Heroes at Home Act of 2007, to improve detection of mild and moderate TBI by developing an objective assessment tool to measure cognitive functioning of solders both prior to and after deployment.
  • Make active duty and veterans healthcare services available to all who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan. The measure would cover all current and former members of the Armed Services who were injured after October 7, 2001, not just those injured after implementation of the bill. Senator Clinton first called for providing a two-year “overlap” of active duty and medically retired health care services and benefits for injured members and former members of the Armed Services as part of her Bridging the Gap for Wounded Warriors Act following reports that soldiers were experiencing problems receiving the healthcare they need as they transition from Department of Defense to VA care.
  • Ensure interoperability of DoD-VA Joint Medical Record. Senator Clinton's provision will make sure that efforts underway by the DoD and VA to create a joint electronic medical record result in a DoD-VA medical record that is compatible and synchronized with the national efforts to develop a nationwide coordinated health IT infrastructure, an issue on which Senator Clinton has been a leader. This measure builds on provisions, which would provide oversight and leadership for a joint DoD-VA interagency office, that Senator Clinton secured in the bill from her Bridging the Gap for Wounded Warriors Act.
  • Reform the Disability Rating System. The Dignified Treatment of Wounded Warriors Act also includes a measure from Senator Clinton’s Bridging the Gap for Wounded Warriors Act that would reform the current flawed disability rating system for wounded servicemembers by ending the flawed DoD rating system and having military departments adopt the VA disability rating system.
  • Provide oversight of the disability rating system. The bill unanimously approved by the Senate also contains Senator Clinton’s provision to ensure needed oversight of the disability rating system for wounded servicemembers by continuing Government Accountability Office (GAO) reviews of treatment of wounded servicemembers. This measure also will ensure that disability benefit determination cases under review are prohibited from being reduced by a new determination. Senator Clinton proposed similar measures as part of her Restoring Disability Benefits for Injured and Wounded Warriors Act.
  • Ensure wounded servicemembers receive needed disability benefits. The Wounded Warrior bill approved by the Senate also includes two other measures from Senator Clinton’s Restoring Disability Benefits for Injured and Wounded Warriors Act: a measure to help make sure servicemembers receive disability benefits they need and deserve by requiring an independent review of disability benefit ratings below 20 percent and increasing disability benefits as warranted and a provision to require that the shortage of Physical Evaluation Board liaison officers and attorneys be addressed by the DoD and VA.
  • Require research on servicemembers with TBI to monitor for signs of Alzheimer's Disease and other neurodegeneration. The measure offered by Senators Clinton and Collins, co-chairs of the Congressional Task Force on Alzheimer’s Disease, requires that any longitudinal studies on members of the Armed Forces with TBI also identify early signs of Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and other neurodegeneration. Head injuries, after age and family history, are one of the leading risk factors for an individual developing Alzheimer’s disease. This amendment builds on a provision for a 15 year longitudinal study on long-term health and mental health consequences of TBI that Senator Clinton proposed and was included in the FY2007 John Warner National Defense Authorization Act.
  • Improve transition from DoD to VA care. This measure, from the TBI Access to Options Act, introduced by Senator Clinton along with Senator Evan Bayh (D-IN)n will improve advocacy and assistance to members with traumatic brain injury and their families as they transition from DOD to VA medical treatment, preventing them from getting caught in bureaucracy and red tape.

The Dignified Treatment of Wounded Warriors Act also includes elements of another Heroes at Home Act of 2007 proposal to provide needed advice and training for families struggling to take care of a loved one with brain injuries and psychological injuries.

As New York's first Senator to serve on the Senate Armed Services Committee, Senator Clinton has made it one of her top priorities to ensure that our brave men and women in uniform have the healthcare and support they need. She has introduced legislation to improve the detection, assessment and treatment of traumatic brain injury and expand support systems for members and former members of the Armed Services with traumatic brain injury and their families. Senator Clinton has also introduced legislation to help ensure wounded soldiers receive the disability benefits they need and deserve and to further protect military family financial benefits. She has pressed for an independent investigation of the conditions at Walter Reed and called for a new GI Bill of Rights to once again honor the service and invest in the future of our men and women in uniform. She authored legislation signed into law last year that required an audit of widespread pay issues wounded soldiers are facing and was recently released by the Army showing continuing problems. Senator Clinton has fought to ensure servicemembers have the body armor they need. She also played a key role in securing into law access to TRICARE military health benefits for all drilling members of the National Guard and Reserves and their families.


###

Home News Contact About Services Issues New York Share Comment Update RSS