The nine-member panel, led by former Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., and Donna Shalala, health and human services secretary during the Clinton administration, also recommended stronger partnerships between the Pentagon and the private sector to boost treatment for traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder.
A 29-page report was presented to President Bush in the Oval Office, just after the Senate addressed some of the issues Wednesday morning by passing sweeping legislation to expand brain screenings, reduce red tape and boost military pay.
The local VA would not comment on the report without seeing it first, said Joann Greenwood, Temple VA spokeswoman.
“Gone are the countless calls for appointments,” said Shalala, who said the proposals would provide more customized, personalized care to injured Iraq war veterans. “Gone are the days of telling the same thing to doctors over and over again.”
Bush praised the proposals as interesting, but White House Press Secretary Tony Snow later cautioned not to expect action right away. Snow said the panel’s ideas would likely be integrated with other ongoing efforts to improve health care and overall treatment of returning soldiers.
About six of the 35 proposals require legislation, while the rest call for action primarily by the Pentagon and Department of Veterans Affairs. The expected price tag for the whole package was about $500 million each year, with added costs that could push it to $1 billion in later years.
Among the recommendations was an indirect rebuke of the VA - a call for Congress to “enable all veterans who have been deployed in Afghanistan and Iraq who need post-traumatic stress disorder care to receive it from the VA.”
Only recently, the VA has taken steps to add mental health counselors and 24-hour suicide prevention services at all facilities, after high-profile incidents of veterans committing suicide. In the past, the VA had failed to use all the money for mental health that was allotted to it.
“Making the significant improvements we recommend requires a sense of urgency and strong leadership,” the report read. “The experiences of these young men and women have highlighted the need for fundamental changes in care management and the disability system.”
The report does not seek to directly criticize or lay blame for shoddy outpatient treatment at Walter Reed Army Medical Center that brought a public outcry for change and creation of the commission. It cited a need to move forward, saying there was no need to “reiterate” the findings of news reports that uncovered substandard care by the Defense Department and VA.
“We owe our wounded soldiers the very best care, and the very best benefits, and the very easiest to understand system,” Bush said. “And so they took a very interesting approach. They took the perspective from the patient, as the patient had to work his way through the hospitals and bureaucracies. And they’ve come up with some very interesting and important suggestions.”
Bush created the panel March 6 to investigate problems in the treatment of wounded veterans following the disclosures at Walter Reed.
The White House event followed the Senate’s vote by unanimous consent on legislation that seeks to end inconsistencies in disability pay by providing for a special review of cases in which service members received low ratings of their level of disability. The aim is to determine if they were shortchanged.
The bill also would boost severance pay and provide $50 million for improved diagnosis of veterans with traumatic brain injury or post-traumatic stress disorder. The House was considering similar measures.
“It has been hurry up and wait for the results of this commission report and now the White House is telling our vets to wait even longer,” said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash. “That’s why the Senate has moved ahead with our Wounded Warriors Act. The public is waiting, our veterans are waiting.”
Paul Rieckhoff, executive director of Iraq & Afghanistan Veterans of America, agreed.
“It is important for the American public to understand that the Walter Reed fiasco is not over,” he said. “Everything is not fixed. The follow-through will be the most important part.”
Dole said he planned to make sure the Bush administration implements the panel’s recommendations.
“We did this because it was important,” he said. “We’re expecting somebody to follow-up on it. I’m going to be watching closely to make sure it happens.”




