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VA Disability Claims Backlog Reduced

Veterans Crisis LineSedona AZ (April 1, 2014) – One year after the backlog of pending disability compensation claims peaked at over 611,000 in March 2013, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has reduced that number by approximately 44 percent to 344,000 claims – a reduction of more than 267,000 – while at the same time improving the accuracy of the decisions being made on Veterans’ disability claims. Additionally, on average, Veterans are waiting 119 days less for a decision than they were at this time last year.

“No Veteran should have to wait to receive earned benefits. Through a combination of transformation initiatives and the hard work of our employees, we are making significant progress toward our goal of eliminating the claims backlog in 2015,” said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric Shinseki. “We still have more work to do, and no one is more committed than our Veterans Benefits Administration employees, over half of whom are Veterans themselves.”

veterans administration logo bannerThe current backlog, defined as claims pending more than 125 days, is at its lowest point since March 2011, when the backlog spiked in part because of the need to readjudicate 150,000 previously decided cases involving exposure to the Vietnam-era defoliant, Agent Orange. The readjudication of these claims was mandated under the Nehmer court decision and followed the Secretary’s decision to add ischemic heart disease, certain leukemias, and Parkinson’s disease to the list of conditions presumed to be related to exposure to Agent Orange. During this same time period, VA also received and processed over 100,000 new claims for these three conditions from Vietnam Veterans and survivors newly eligible for VA benefits as a result of this decision.

“We knew taking care of this ‘unfinished business’ for Veterans of previous wars would initially drive up the number of claims in our system. But it was the right thing to do,” said Secretary Shinseki.

Since establishing the goal in 2010 of processing all disability claims within 125 days at a 98-percent accuracy level, VA developed and is implementing a plan that transforms the decades-old, manual paper claim approach into a state-of-the-art electronic process that leverages digital data transfer and automated calculators to reduce processing time and input errors.

women support veterans administrationVA has also increased the productivity of its claims processing workforce through enhanced training, streamlined business processes and other initiatives such as mandatingovertime and  prioritizing the oldest claims, allowing VA’s 56 regional benefits offices to exceed monthly  production records four times in fiscal year 2013.

At the same time, the accuracy of rating decisions continues to improve. VA’s national “claim-level” accuracy rate, determined by dividing the total number of cases that are error-free by the total number of cases reviewed, is currently 91 percent – an eight-percentage-point improvement since 2011. When measuring the accuracy of rating individual medical conditions inside each claim, the three-month accuracy level is 96.5 percent. VA’s accuracy measures are statistically valid and the process has been independently verified by the Institute for Defense Analyses.

Veterans AdministrationVA claims processors continue to prioritize disability claims for homeless Veterans, those experiencing extreme financial hardship, the terminally ill, former Prisoners of War, Medal of Honor recipients, and Veterans filing Fully Developed Claims (FDC). Filing an electronic FDC is the quickest way for a Veteran to receive a decision on their compensation claim (http://www.benefits.va.gov/fdc/).

Regardless of the status of their compensation claims, Veterans who have served in combat since November 11, 1998, are eligible for five years of free medical care from VA for any illness associated with their service.

Veterans can learn more about disability and other Veterans benefits on the joint Department of Defense/VA web portal eBenefits at www.ebenefits.va.gov.

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6 Comments

  1. April 7-13 is National Public Health Week. There are many things you can do to jump start your involvement in your health care.

    Be Informed:

    A key part of taking charge of your health care is being informed. When you have the most up-to-date and relevant health care information, you can actively participate when making decisions that affect your health. VA has resources to help you become, and stay, an informed health care provider.

    Develop Healthy Habits:

    Quit tobacco.
    Get tested for HIV.
    Immunize.
    Exercise regularly.
    Eat healthy.
    Wash hands.

    Enroll in VA Health Care:

    VA wants all Veterans to get health care that improves their health and well-being. If you do not already have VA health care, find out if you qualify and enroll today.

    If you are already enrolled in VA health care, you may be wondering what the Affordable Care Act, also known as the health care law means for you. The law does not change VA health benefits or Veterans’ out-of-pocket costs.

    National Public Health Week is sponsored by the American Public Health Association.

  2. Ollie Miller says:

    Shout out to our vets

  3. Liked this article on Facebook.

  4. Liked this article on Facebook.

  5. Fine information but have little doubt benefit attainment is as rosy as the government would like veterans to believe. Please keep up the fine effort of detailing information that cannot be found elsewhere.

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