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The first step in a veteran’s disability claim can make or break the outcome

26 November 2025 at 22:03

Interview transcript:

 

Elizabeth Curda The disability exam process is an important component in the decisions that VA has to make about a veteran’s claim for disability. So for example, if a veteran was injured during their service in Iraq and they have ongoing hearing problems, but they don’t have medical records to substantiate that, they might be asked to do a medical disability exam to establish that they have that condition and it’s connected to their service.

Terry Gerton How much does the VA spend on this, and do they do it all in house?

Elizabeth Curda It’s a very costly program. It used to be done within the VHA hospital systems, Veterans Health Administration, but in recent years they have shifted most of the work to contractors. And VA spends about $5 billion, that was the expenditure in 2024, and the contractors do over 90% of all the disability exams.

Terry Gerton So as GAO got into this report, what motivated you to start it and what did you find?

Elizabeth Curda Well, we had a request from the chairman of the House VA Committee’s subcommittee on disability and memorial affairs, Chairman Luttrell, to look at the quality of these exams. When you have a contractor performing a function for the government, your toolbox in terms of keeping that contractor accountable — you have to be able to assure you have oversight over the quality of the work that they’re doing, in addition to things like timeliness. And so they wanted to know, what is VA doing to oversee the quality of these exams? We took a comprehensive look at all aspects of their oversight, and we found that overall they had a lot of processes in place for oversight in areas such as preventing errors, detecting errors that occur, and correcting them after the fact. So a lot going on, but we did find some areas for improvement and made recommendations.

Terry Gerton I can imagine that the distribution of contracted providers for this service is nationwide, so that oversight is especially critical in helping to ensure that a veteran in Indiana has a similar experience and quality as a veteran in Texas or California. What were the sorts of challenges that you discovered?

Elizabeth Curda Well, we made five recommendations that cut across three broad areas. And those broad areas were, as we found, breakdowns in some of their procedures for identifying and correcting the most frequent or complex issues with exams. We found issues with financial incentive payments that they make to the contractors. We found errors that resulted in overpayments. And we also saw a gap in an important source of feedback, which is the examiners themselves. VA gets feedback from all different parties: the contracting companies, the veterans, but they didn’t have any way to get direct feedback from examiners who are doing the day-to-day work.

Terry Gerton The part of VA that administers this is the Veterans Benefit Administration, not the health administration portion of VA, is that correct?

Elizabeth Curda Yes.

Terry Gerton And so VBA not only manages these exams but also the full disability determination requirement. They must be stretched pretty thin.

Elizabeth Curda That is correct. We have been reporting for years that they are in our high-risk list for managing their workloads. And that is basically the influx of claims and being able to handle those on a timely basis. So yes, they have been historically stretched pretty thin.

Terry Gerton I’m speaking with Elizabeth Curda. She’s a director in the education workforce and income security team at GAO. So Elizabeth, then tell us more about the recommendations that you made particularly.

Elizabeth Curda We made recommendations over two years. Our initial report on this was last September in a hearing, and we had a recommendation for a process that VBA conducts in which they feed to the contractors on a quarterly basis the most frequent errors. The contractors are required on a quarterly basis to write a report to VA on what they’re going to do to correct those errors. Now we found that VA did not have complete and effective practices for how to review these reports. So the quality review people would get these reports back from the contractors, and then everyone would write a little summary based on sort of what they thought they should be doing. But there wasn’t any procedure for, what should they be looking for in these reports? And the two things that we found that were missing were nobody checks to see if the contractors go back and actually do these actions. So there’s no checking to see if the contractors are fixing things. And there’s no effort to determine if those actions were effective or not. Are they seeing the errors go down? What’s the outcome of all this work? So that was one area.

Terry Gerton It sounds like that might be an opportunity to deploy AI. If you’re getting all of these reports in, maybe an AI reviewer could help streamline those and tell you about trends and where to follow up.

Elizabeth Curda Well that is another topic because that is very complex. And VA is really, I mean, we’ve discussed some of their efforts with AI and it’s really kind of at its very beginnings. But yes, potentially.

Terry Gerton And so what was the second recommendation?

Elizabeth Curda The second area also had to do with oversight of exams and it has to do with what they call “special focus reviews.” And these are three areas where they’re very complex and they tend to have a high error rate. It’s traumatic brain injury, military sexual trauma, and Gulf War illness. So they had a procedure to do these every two years. And they had done one round of the reviews, but they were late — over a year late — doing another round of reviews. And so we recommended that they basically do the second round of reviews on schedule. We subsequently, in the course of our work, learned that their staff have been cut by about 50% of the folks who were doing this particular function. And so they said in response to us that they will be switching to a three-year cycle, which in our view was, it’s better than no years. But we think the two-year cycle would be ultimately better because then you identify things that are working or not working and can take corrective action sooner. They also have begun negotiations on their new contracts for these contractors, which are long term, you know, they were multi-years, and things that they’re finding from these special focus reviews could be built into those contracts. But only if they’re done in a timely manner.

Terry Gerton Did you get any feedback from the providers themselves about how this process was working?

Elizabeth Curda We checked in with the people who do the disability exams, we call them the examiners, and we randomly selected examiners to talk to. And what we found is universally they felt they wanted opportunities to provide feedback about the exam process directly to VBA. Currently the process is, because they work for a contractor, all that feedback would go through the contractor up to VBA. And VBA basically told us, “we get all that feedback, the contractor gives us feedback.” But what we heard from the examiners is, you know, they don’t always feel they’re being listened to, they don’t always have their problems addressed, and they also sometimes get conflicting information if they work for more than one contractor. Different contractors will tell them to do things differently, and they don’t think that both can be right. But they have a hard time resolving these things themselves.

Terry Gerton So better communication, more checking. What else was on the list?

Elizabeth Curda The last area had to do with these financial incentive payments. The way VBA incentivizes good performance is they have these three areas: quality, timeliness, and customer satisfaction. And they measure, for each of the contractors, how well they do in those dimensions. And they feed that into a formula that will produce a bonus payment to contractors that score particularly well and penalties for those that are not meeting basic thresholds. And what we found was the way they calculate these is on a spreadsheet with a lot of manual data entry, and they were doing manual calculations as well. And there wasn’t a procedure in place to double-check the numbers, the data entry. They were doing some checking, but it wasn’t formalized. And so when we reviewed the numbers, we found that VBA had caught some of its errors on its own, but we found some that they hadn’t caught. And it was about $2.3 million worth of errors — bonuses that went out to contractors that did not earn them. And that really just sends … it’s the wrong message. You’re getting paid and you didn’t actually earn it.

Terry Gerton Exactly. How has VBA responded to your findings and recommendations?

Elizabeth Curda VBA agreed, or they use the term agree in principle when they sort of agreed, with all the recommendations. They actually have reported that they’re taking action on all of them, and some I think are very close to being implemented, such as the one on financial incentives. They told us there was a hearing on this last week, and they said that they actually have gotten the money back from the contractor and they are putting in place these new procedures. We just haven’t seen that documentation yet. But you know, when we do we’ll evaluate whether we can close that one or not. But all of them are sort of in the works, you know, in various stages of completion.

Terry Gerton So will you be following up with VBA to check how they’re doing?

Elizabeth Curda Oh, certainly. And we always follow up on our recommendations at least annually, but sometimes more than that, just depending on when they have updates for us.

The post The first step in a veteran’s disability claim can make or break the outcome first appeared on Federal News Network.

© Air Force/Senior Airman Karla Parra

U.S. Airmen from the 332nd Air Expeditionary Wing honor the daily estimated number of veterans who take their own lives, symbolized by 22 pairs of boots in recognition of Suicide Prevention Month Sept. 8, 2021, from an undisclosed location somewhere in Southwest Asia. Suicide Prevention Awareness Month stresses the importance of mental health and encourages individuals to seek help if they need it. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Karla Parra)

Senate-passed spending deal sets VA staffing targets amid reorganization

11 November 2025 at 18:20

A Senate-passed spending plan to end the longest government shutdown includes bills that would keep the Department of Veterans Affairs funded through the rest of the fiscal year.

The fiscal 2026 spending bill “minibus” passed by the Senate on Monday gives the VA $133 billion in discretionary spending — about a 3% increase compared to last year.

The Senate also approved FY 2026 funding for the Agriculture Department, military construction and the legislative branch.

Lawmakers have included several provisions to ensure the VA doesn’t shed too many employees, as part of its ongoing agency reorganization plans.

The VA previously planned to eliminate 83,000 positions this year. Those plans involved cutting 20,000 clinical staff from the Veterans Health Administration, including nurses and other frontline medical staff.

The department, however, scrapped plans for a department-wide reduction in force, and instead planned to eliminate 30,000 positions by the end of fiscal 2025, largely through attrition.

The spending bill gives the VA 90 days to provide the House and Senate appropriations committees with a staffing model “that will ensure timely, high-quality delivery of healthcare, benefits, and other services.”

“The department is directed to maintain staffing levels to facilitate the department’s own goals,” lawmakers wrote.

On the health care side of VA’s operations, those targets include veterans waiting no longer than 20 days for primary and mental health care appointments, and no more than 28 days for specialty care appointments. The Veterans Benefits Administration must also ensure that it has enough employees to adjudicate benefits claims within 125 days.

The spending bill specifically bars the VA from reducing staffing levels, hours of operation or services at the Veterans Crisis Line or any of its other suicide prevention programs.

Former VCL employees told the Senate VA Committee this summer that hotline employees are often overwhelmed juggling multiple incoming texts and web chats.

Lawmakers wrote that the Veterans Crisis Line “is often the first place a veteran will turn to in a moment of crisis,” and that they are “concerned about the continued functionality, accessibility, and performance of the VCL.”

The VA must also provide the House and Senate appropriations committees with an update on VCL staffing levels and capacity to respond to incoming calls. The report must also include call answer rates, average wait times and referrals to suicide prevention coordinators.

The spending bill also prohibits the VA from terminating any contract over $10 million, unless the VA provides advanced notice to the House and Senate committees, explaining how the department plans to replace the services in the contract targeted for elimination, and whether ending the contract would result in any change in the VA’s staffing levels.

VA gets billions to resume EHR rollout

The Senate-passed spending bill would give the VA $3.4 billion to resume the rollout of its new Electronic Health Record.

The funds will go toward deploying the new EHR to 13 new locations in 2026, as well as “optimization” of the six sites already using the new EHR.

The VA paused its EHR deployment schedule in April 2023, and used the “reset” period to address problems at sites already using the system.

The department currently plans to roll out the new EHR to 27 sites in 2027, but it’s still far away from fully deploying the new system to about 170 VA medical centers across the country.

The Defense Department completed its own rollout of the same health record system last year.

Lawmakers are holding onto nearly a third of the EHR modernization funds until July 2026 and will only release the money once the VA has demonstrated that the project is back on track.

Congress will release 30% of the EHR modernization funds to the VA once it has certified that it has seen “at least four consecutive successful site deployments without any incidents of a delay in care or patient harm.”

To receive these funds, the VA must also give Congress an updated lifecycle cost estimate for the new EHR, a facility-by-facility deployment schedule, projected staffing levels and whether sites already using the new EHR are meeting baseline productivity targets.

VA’s EHR deployment plans for fiscal 2026 focus on medical facilities in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana — although go-lives are also planned in Kentucky and Alaska that year.

Lawmakers wrote that they are “encouraged by deployment activities” at some of the 2026 EHR sites. However, they wrote that “Congress remains vigilant of potential usability problems that have led to or contributed to instances of patient harm and reduced employee productivity.”

The post Senate-passed spending deal sets VA staffing targets amid reorganization first appeared on Federal News Network.

© AP/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

Veteran Affairs building near the White House in Washington, Feb. 14, 2018. An internal watchdog's investigation has found that Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin improperly accepted Wimbledon tennis tickets and likely wrongly used taxpayer money to cover his wife's airfare for an 11-day European trip. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
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