Obama reassures veterans on health care

  • By Tom Philpott Military Update
  • Friday, August 7, 2009 6:43pm
  • Business

President Barack Obama says his push to reform the nation’s health care system will not diminish health benefits for service families or retirees who use Tricare, or for veterans who rely on VA hospitals and clinics.

He actually suggested that as health reform takes hold across the country, veterans who live far from VA health facilities could see affordable alternatives closer to home.

“If you’re in the VA or Tricare, this will not force you to change systems,” Obama said. But those eligible for VA benefits also should know that, with national health reform, “veterans would be eligible, potentially, for this health care exchange where they could select from a different set of plans,” Obama said.

Under such exchange plans, he added, veterans might receive “some help in paying for their premiums, depending on what their income levels were. So it’ll actually give them more choice and more flexibility.”

Whatever system a person is in — VA, Tricare, private insurance or Medicare — Obama said, “we have a problem with health care generally in this country. We pay about $6,000 more per person than any other advanced nation, and our health outcomes are not much better and in some cases a little bit worse.”

Separate from the issue of national health care reform, however, Obama acknowledged that Defense Secretary Robert Gates remains worried about the rising cost of Tricare.

Obama and VA Secretary Eric Shinseki sat down Tuesday for 45 minutes at the White House with a small group of journalists who cover pay and benefit issues for military members, retirees, veterans and their families.

The president said that as Congress goes into summer recess and some major service organizations hold annual conventions, he wanted to point out what his administration had accomplished for veterans during his its first seven month. He ticked off the details for five minutes without consulting notes. Among them:

n The largest VA budget increase in 30 years.

n An additional $25 billion over five years to improve diagnosis and treatment of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Traumatic Brain Injury, signature injuries of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; to open more VA clinics in rural areas; and to hire more claim adjudicators to address a growing backlog of disability claims.

n A more aggressive outreach effort to educate veterans about their benefits. “Although there are hundreds of thousands of veterans who are using services, we know that there are hundreds of thousands more who may not know that benefits are available,” said Obama. VA is “working hard to make sure that every single veteran — not just of our active forces but also the National Guard and reservists — are aware of the benefits that are available to them and (we’re) guiding them through that process.”

n Implementation of the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill, which Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., introduced and pushed through Congress last year. The president said the new GI Bill, like the one offered after World War II, will produce “a highly educated work force … to help to drive economic growth for many years to come, even as it provides a tangible reward for people who’ve made such extraordinary sacrifices on behalf of our country.”

Obama was asked if he would support a legislative change to the new G.I. Bill to make National Guard members activated under Title 32, in response to domestic emergencies or homeland security missions, eligible for the education benefits. Currently, only those activated under Title 10, to serve under the president’s command in Iraq and Afghanistan, are eligible.

The president gave a qualified yes, saying he didn’t know all of the details his budget people are discussing with congressional committees in their effort to end various glitches in last year’s law.

To comment, e-mail milupdate@aol.com, write to Military Update, P.O. Box 231111, Centreville, VA, 20120-1111 or go to www.militaryupdate.com.

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