DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 10, 2005
No Across-the-Board Review of PTSD Cases – Secretary Nicholson
WASHINGTON – The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) will not review
the files of 72,000 veterans currently receiving disability compensation
for post-traumatic stress disorder, the Department's secretary announced
today.
On May 19, 2005, VA's Inspector General reported on an examination of
the files of a sample of 2,100 randomly selected veterans with
disability ratings for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The IG
cited insufficient documentation in the files and a dramatic increase in
veterans filing for disability compensation for post-traumatic stress
disorder since 1999.
"We have now just completed our own careful review of those 2,100
files cited in the IG's report,'' said the Honorable R. James Nicholson,
Secretary of Veterans Affairs. "The problems with these files appear to
be administrative in nature, such as missing documents, and not fraud."
"In the absence of evidence of fraud, we're not going to put our
veterans through the anxiety of a widespread review of their disability
claims,'' Nicholson said."Instead, we're going to improve our training
for VA personnel who handle disability claims and toughen administrative
oversight."
"Not all combat wounds are caused by bullets and shrapnel," Nicholson
added. "We have a commitment to ensure veterans with PTSD receive
compassionate, world-class health care and appropriate disability
compensation determinations."