Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Quality care for veterans

- CHRISTOPHE­R DALE

In advance of this year’s Veterans Day, the legions of men and women who have served in our nation’s military received some welcoming news: Congress finally agreed to fund the VA Mission Act, which since its June passage had been mired in budgetary disputes.

Announced on Sept. 11—an appropriat­e date— the arrangemen­t sets aside more than $200 billion to improve the health care services provided by the U.S. Department of Veterans’ Affairs.

Tales of delays and deficienci­es, including long waits and poor access to proper care, have plagued the VA since injured vets started returning from Afghanista­n and Iraq following 9/11. Last fall—16 years after the War on Terror began—the VA was still flooded with serious complaints about patient care; earlier this year, concerns about doctor shortages made headlines.

It’s these issues that the VA Mission Act seeks to address. The law makes it easier for veterans to access covered care through non-VA service providers, who may be more convenient in terms of expedience, distance or quality of care.

The law’s primary principle is simple: Those injured while serving in the military should not need to jump through hoops for quality medical care.

The law also provides incentives for recruiting new doctors to the VA, including an attractive education debt-relief initiative and specialize­d training in affliction­s most likely to impact veterans, such as PTSD and painkiller addiction.

It’s a terrific start, but the law has shortcomin­gs. For starters, despite settling the summer-long financial squabble, Congress failed to deliver a long-term funding solution for the law’s historical­ly high (though completely necessary) revenue requiremen­ts.

But the law’s greatest disappoint­ment is its narrowly defined view of caring for our injured veterans.

Tens of thousands of men and women have returned from Iraq and Afghanista­n with permanent physical handicaps and deep emotional scars—wounds they will be coping with for the rest of their lives. Many need assistance outside the doctor’s office, including finding suitable employment in an economy that, though humming for many, is far from ideal for individual­s with disabiliti­es, whose unemployme­nt rate is more than double the national average.

Of course, nonprofit organizati­ons like the Wounded Warrior Project have been offering life-affirming tools for well over a decade. But why should it be up to private charities to take care of those who battled and bled for their country?

In a political landscape where we can’t seem to agree on anything, it’s likely that anyone—Democrat or Republican—would be challenged to find a single service provided by charities like the Wounded Warrior Project that doesn’t deserve the full financial backing of the U.S. government.

We shouldn’t have to pull on the heartstrin­gs, and purse strings, of strangers to care for wounded war veterans in the United States. Their care should be provided, in full, by the American people.

Christophe­r Dale of Little Falls, New Jersey, writes on society, politics and sobriety-based issues.

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