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Using the VA System

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Legionnaires in good standing are entitled to a $1,000.00 Travel Accident benefit at NO COST to them. To claim your entitlement, simply click below.

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Though the U.S. has a long history of caring for its veterans, today’s Department of Veterans Affairs is a fairly recent development.

Established in March 1989, the Department succeeded the former Veterans Administration to become the second largest Cabinet level department within the United States government. Nationwide, the VA operates programs for health care, financial assistance and burial benefits for eligible Americans.

As a veteran, you are among one in four Americans (approximately 63 million) who are potentially eligible for VA benefits and services.

Eligibility doesn’t depend solely on personal military service, however; your dependents such as a surviving spouse or child may be eligible, as of course are active duty military service members and members of the Reserve or National Guard.

The nation’s responsibility to care for veterans and their families can last decades. According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, five children of Civil War veterans still draw VA benefits. And about 440 children and widows of Spanish-American War veterans still receive VA compensation or pensions.

According to the most recent figures available, the VA fiscal year spending for 2005 was $71.2 billion. Of that, $37.1 billion went to pay for benefits, $31.5 billion for health care, and $148 million for the national cemetery system.

When you contemplate those figures, consider this: If you were to spend a $1,000 a day, for seven days a week, it would take you 2,737 years, 10 months, 7 days to spend just 1 billion dollars.1

Needless to say, the VA is a massive benefits system.

How do you get your share?

There are eight major categories of benefits available through the VA:

  1. Compensation and pension
  2. Education and training
  3. Medical care
  4. Research
  5. Home loan assistance
  6. Insurance
  7. Vocational rehabilitation
  8. VA National Cemeteries

Download booklet “Federal Benefits for Veterans and Dependents, 2006 Edition”

The most visible of these benefits is health care; more than 5.3 million people received care in a VA facility in 2005.

Care is typically not automatic. To receive VA health care benefits, you must enroll.

The only exceptions to this rule are: 1) if you have a service-connected disability of 50 percent or more; 2) if you’ve been discharged in the last year but have not yet been rated for a VA disability benefit; and 3) if you are seeking care for only a service-connected disability.

Once you enroll, you are placed in priority groups or categories for access to care.

These range from a Priority 1 for veterans with service-connected disabilities of 50% or more, or those unable to work because of service connected conditions, down to Priority 8 (now restricted) for veterans with no service-connected disabilities and who meet income guidelines. (View a complete list of priority rankings.)

What You Can Expect from the VA Health Care System

From 54 hospitals in 1930, the VA’s health care system now includes 154 medical centers, with at least one in each state, Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia.

Because the VA manages one of the largest medical education and training programs in the U.S., it is also a world leader in medical research.

VA researchers played key roles in developing the cardiac pacemaker, the CT scan, and improvements in artificial limbs. The first liver transplant was performed by a VA surgeon. VA clinical trials helped develop effective treatments for tuberculosis, schizophrenia, and high blood pressure.

One of the reasons the VA excels in research is because it tends to bring more diverse physicians to its staff.

Because VA doctors are not limited by state-of-residence certifications, the VA can cast for a wider pool of talent. That’s why, as you navigate your VA health care benefits, you are more likely to be treated by partially retired, recently certified, or foreign-certified physicians than you might be in a private health care clinic or community hospital.2

Claiming your benefits

Once you enroll, your condition or situation will be evaluated, and you’ll need to meet eligibility requirements and income thresholds for any benefit claim.

One fact: No matter what benefit you are claiming, there will be forms to fill out and files to complete.

That’s why it pays to take a few moments now to learn about your rights and how to claim them.

For a comprehensive listing of what is available to you, visit the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs online, or phone toll free 1 (800) 827-1000.

Reference:
“Fact Sheet,” The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Available online at http://www1.va.gov/opa/fact/

Additional sources:
1Classroomtools.com. Available online at http://www.classroomtools.com/billion.htm

2 How to File and Collect on VA Claims, John D. Roche. © 2002 Potomac Books, Inc., Washington, D.C., pp. 23-24.



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Saturday, March 13, 2010
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