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Testimony: 

Before the Personnel Subcommittee of the Committee on Armed Services, 
U.S. Senate: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 2:30 p.m. EDT:
Wednesday, April 29, 2009: 

Recovering Servicemembers: 

DOD and VA Have Made Progress to Jointly Develop Required Policies but 
Additional Challenges Remain: 

Statement of Randall B. Williamson:
Director, DOD and VA Health Care: 

Statement of Daniel Bertoni:
Director, Education, Workforce, and Income Security: 

Statement of Valerie C. Melvin:
Director, Information Management and Human Capital Issues: 

GAO-09-540T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-09-540T, a testimony before the Personnel 
Subcommittee of the Committee on Armed Services, U.S. Senate. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (NDAA 2008) 
requires the Departments of Defense (DOD) and Veterans Affairs (VA) to 
jointly develop and implement comprehensive policies on the care, 
management, and transition of recovering servicemembers. The Senior 
Oversight Committee (SOC)—jointly chaired by DOD and VA leadership—has 
assumed responsibility for these policies. The NDAA 2008 also requires 
GAO to report on the progress DOD and VA make in developing and 
implementing the policies. 

This statement provides preliminary information on (1) the progress DOD 
and VA have made in jointly developing the comprehensive policies 
required in the NDAA 2008 and (2) the challenges DOD and VA are 
encountering in the joint development and initial implementation of 
these policies. 

GAO determined the current status of policy development by assessing 
the status reported by SOC officials and analyzing supporting 
documentation. To identify challenges, GAO interviewed the Acting Under 
Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, the Executive 
Director and Chief of Staff of the SOC, the departmental co-leads for 
most of the SOC work groups, the Acting Director of DOD’s Office of 
Transition Policy and Care Coordination, and other knowledgeable 
officials. 

What GAO Found: 

DOD and VA have made substantial progress in jointly developing 
policies required by sections 1611 through 1614 of the NDAA 2008 in the 
areas of (1) care and management, (2) medical and disability 
evaluation, (3) return to active duty, and (4) transition of care and 
services received from DOD to VA. Overall, GAO’s analysis showed that 
as of April 2009, 60 of the 76 requirements GAO identified have been 
completed and the remaining 16 requirements are in progress. DOD and VA 
have completed all of the policy development requirements for medical 
and disability evaluations, including issuing a report on the 
feasibility and advisability of consolidating the DOD and VA disability 
evaluation systems, although the pilot for this approach is still 
ongoing. DOD has also completed establishing standards for returning 
recovering servicemembers to active duty. More than two-thirds of the 
policy development requirements have been completed for the remaining 
two policy areas—care and management and the transition of recovering 
servicemembers from DOD to VA. Most of these requirements were 
addressed in a January 2009 DOD Directive-Type Memorandum that was 
developed in consultation with VA. DOD officials reported that more 
information will be provided in a subsequent policy instruction, which 
will be issued in June 2009. VA also plans to issue related policy 
guidance in June 2009. 

DOD and VA officials told GAO that they have experienced numerous 
challenges as they worked to jointly develop policies to improve the 
care, management, and transition of recovering servicemembers. 
According to officials, these challenges contributed to the length of 
time required to issue policy guidance, and in some cases the 
challenges have not yet been completely resolved. For example, the SOC 
must still standardize key terminology relevant to policy issues 
affecting recovering servicemembers. DOD and VA agreement on key 
definitions for what constitutes “mental health,” for instance, is 
important for developing policies that define the scope, eligibility, 
and service levels for recovering servicemembers. Recent changes 
affecting the SOC may also pose future challenges to policy 
development. Some officials have expressed concern that DOD’s recent 
changes to staff supporting the SOC have disrupted the unity of command 
because SOC staff now report to three different officials within DOD 
and VA. However, it is too soon to determine how DOD’s staffing changes 
will work. Additionally, according to DOD and VA officials, the SOC’s 
scope of responsibilities appears to be in flux. While the SOC will 
remain responsible for policy matters for recovering servicemembers, a 
number of policy issues may now be directed to the DOD and VA Joint 
Executive Council. Despite this uncertainty, DOD and VA officials told 
GAO that the SOC’s work groups continue to carry out their 
responsibilities. 

GAO shared the information contained in this statement with DOD and VA 
officials, and they agreed with the information GAO presented. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-540T] or key 
components. For more information, contact Randall B. Williamson at 
(202) 512-7114 or williamsonr@gao.gov, Daniel Bertoni at (202) 512-7215 
or bertonid@gao.gov, or Valerie C. Melvin at (202) 512-6304 or 
melvinv@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

We are pleased to be here today as you examine issues related to 
meeting the critical needs of recovering servicemembers by reviewing 
the progress made by the Department of Defense (DOD) and the Department 
of Veterans Affairs (VA) in jointly developing policies mandated by the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (NDAA 2008). 
[Footnote 1] 

Over 1.6 million U.S. troops have deployed in Operation Enduring 
Freedom (OEF) and Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) since October 2001. 
[Footnote 2],[Footnote 3] In February 2009, DOD reported that over 
33,000 servicemembers have been wounded in action since the onset of 
these conflicts.[Footnote 4] Because of improved battlefield medicine, 
those who might have died in past conflicts are now surviving, many 
with multiple serious injuries such as amputations, traumatic brain 
injury (TBI), and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Beyond 
adjusting to their injuries, recovering servicemembers may face 
additional challenges, including difficulties managing their outpatient 
recovery process, difficulties navigating the military's disability 
evaluation system, and problems transitioning between care provided by 
DOD and care provided by VA. 

Questions were raised in the media and by Congress about whether DOD 
and VA are prepared to meet the needs of the increasing number of 
recovering servicemembers and veterans. In February 2007, a series of 
Washington Post articles disclosed deficiencies in the provision of 
outpatient services at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, including poor 
living conditions at Walter Reed, a confusing disability evaluation 
system, and servicemembers remaining in outpatient status for months 
and sometimes years without a clear understanding about their plan of 
care or the future of their military service. Various review groups 
investigated the challenges that DOD and VA faced in providing care to 
recovering servicemembers and made a number of recommendations to 
address the problems they identified. Shortly after the media 
disclosures, we testified about the challenges facing recovering 
servicemembers during their recovery process.[Footnote 5] 

In May 2007, DOD and VA established the Wounded, Ill, and Injured 
Senior Oversight Committee (SOC) to address the problems that had been 
identified with the care of recovering servicemembers. The committee is 
co-chaired by the Deputy Secretaries of DOD and VA and includes 
military service Secretaries and other high-ranking officials within 
both departments. One of the SOC's primary responsibilities is to 
oversee the development of policies in response to the recommendations 
of the review groups that studied the issues associated with recovering 
servicemembers' health care and benefits. Generally, senior officials 
from the SOC sign and issue interim policy guidance, which is then 
vetted through DOD's and VA's internal processes to be finalized as 
department policies. 

The NDAA 2008, which was enacted in January 2008, requires DOD and VA, 
to the extent feasible, to jointly develop and implement a 
comprehensive policy on improvements to the care, management, and 
transition of recovering servicemembers. Specifically, section 1611(a) 
of the NDAA 2008 directs DOD and VA to cover four key areas--(1) care 
and management, (2) medical evaluation and disability evaluation, (3) 
the return of servicemembers to active duty, and (4) the transition of 
recovering servicemembers from DOD to VA. Because of the related 
ongoing work of the SOC, it assumed responsibility for addressing these 
requirements. The NDAA 2008 also requires GAO to report on the progress 
DOD and VA make in developing and implementing the comprehensive 
policy.[Footnote 6] Our work is focused on the status of the 
development of the comprehensive policy, which includes the development 
of multiple policies that are further enumerated in sections 1611 
through 1614 of the law. 

In my testimony today, I will discuss our preliminary findings on (1) 
the progress DOD and VA have made in jointly developing comprehensive 
policies for recovering servicemembers in the areas of care and 
management, medical and disability evaluation, return to active duty, 
and transition from care and services received from DOD to VA as 
required by sections 1611 through 1614 of the NDAA 2008 and (2) the 
challenges DOD and VA are encountering in the joint development and 
initial implementation of these policies. 

To assess the extent to which DOD and VA have made progress in 
developing the required policies, we asked SOC representatives to 
report on the status of policy development for the 76 individual 
requirements that we identified in sections 1611 through 1614 of the 
NDAA 2008, which we grouped into 14 categories.[Footnote 7] (See app. I 
for a summary of these requirements and categories.) We also asked the 
SOC representatives to provide documentation to substantiate the status 
of each requirement, and we verified the reported status of each 
requirement by reviewing this documentation. We determined whether each 
of the requirements (1) had been completed, (2) was in progress, or (3) 
had not been acted upon. We considered a requirement to have been 
"completed" if a document had been signed and approved by DOD, VA, or 
both, at the SOC level, that contained standards, guidelines, or 
procedures that addressed the requirement, even if DOD, VA, or both 
plan to issue additional policies on the subject.[Footnote 8] We 
considered a requirement to be "in progress" if documentation 
demonstrated that work had been initiated to develop standards, 
guidelines, or procedures that addressed the requirement. We considered 
a requirement not to have been acted upon if no action had been taken 
to develop standards, guidelines, or procedures that address the 
requirement. We based our review in part on the interim policy 
documents signed by DOD and VA officials working through the SOC. In 
some cases, interim policy documents were signed by officials of both 
departments, and in other cases, the documents were signed by officials 
of one department, depending upon the requirement. Interim policy 
documents could be in the form of memoranda of agreement, memoranda of 
understanding, directives, decision-or directive-type memoranda, 
instructions or policy memoranda, or other guidelines or forms of 
guidance. In addition, we conducted follow-up interviews with DOD and 
VA officials when we needed clarification on the reported progress or 
additional documentation. We did not, however, evaluate the quality of 
the policy documents we reviewed. To identify the challenges DOD and VA 
encountered in jointly developing and initially implementing the 
required policies, we interviewed officials from both departments to 
obtain an account of their experiences in the policy development 
process. In conducting our work, we interviewed the Acting Under 
Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, the Executive 
Director and Chief of Staff of the SOC, the departmental co-leads for 
most of the SOC work groups, the Acting Director of DOD's Office of 
Transition Policy and Care Coordination, and other relevant DOD and VA 
officials. We shared the information contained in this statement with 
DOD and VA officials, and they agreed with the information we 
presented. 

We conducted our work from May 2008 through April 2009 in accordance 
with all sections of GAO's Quality Assurance Framework that are 
relevant to our objectives. The framework requires that we plan and 
perform the engagement to obtain sufficient and appropriate evidence to 
meet our stated objectives and to discuss any limitations in our work. 
We believe that the information and data obtained, and the analysis 
conducted, provide a reasonable basis for any findings and conclusions. 

Background: 

Over the past 8 years, DOD has designated over 33,000 servicemembers 
involved in OEF and OIF as wounded in action. The severity of injuries 
can result in a lengthy process for a patient to either return to duty 
or to transition to veteran status. The most seriously injured 
servicemembers from these conflicts usually receive care at Walter Reed 
Army Medical Center or the National Naval Medical Center.[Footnote 9] 
According to DOD officials, once they are stabilized and discharged 
from the hospital, servicemembers may relocate closer to their homes or 
military bases and be treated as outpatients by the closest military or 
VA facility. 

Recovering servicemembers potentially navigate two different disability 
evaluation systems that serve different purposes. DOD's system serves a 
personnel management purpose by identifying servicemembers who are no 
longer medically fit for duty. If a servicemember is found unfit 
because of medical conditions incurred in the line of duty, the 
servicemember is assigned a disability rating and can be discharged 
from duty. This disability rating, along with years of service and 
other factors, determines subsequent disability and health care 
benefits from DOD. Under VA's system, disability ratings help determine 
the level of disability compensation a veteran receives and priority 
status for enrollment for health care benefits. To determine 
eligibility for disability compensation, VA evaluates all claimed 
medical conditions, whether they were evaluated previously by the 
military service's evaluation process or not. If VA finds that a 
veteran has one or more service-connected disabilities that together 
result in a final rating of at least 10 percent,[Footnote 10] VA will 
pay monthly compensation and the veteran will be eligible to receive 
medical care from VA. 

Efforts to Address the Care and Benefits for Recovering Servicemembers: 

Efforts have been taken to address the deficiencies reported at Walter 
Reed related to the care provided and transitioning of recovering 
servicemembers. After the press reports about Walter Reed, several high-
level review groups were established to study the care and benefits 
provided to recovering servicemembers by DOD and VA. The studies 
produced from all of these groups, released from April 2007 through 
June 2008, contained over 400 recommendations covering a broad range of 
topics, including case management, disability evaluation systems, data 
sharing between the departments, and the need to better understand and 
diagnose TBI and PTSD.[Footnote 11] 

In May 2007, DOD and VA established the SOC as a temporary, 1-year 
committee with the responsibility for addressing recommendations from 
these reports. To conduct its work, the SOC established eight work 
groups called lines of action (LOA). Each LOA is co-chaired by 
representatives from DOD and VA and has representation from each 
military service. LOAs are responsible for specific issues, such as 
disability evaluation systems and case management. (See table 1 for an 
overview of the LOAs.) The committee was originally intended to expire 
May 2008 but it was extended to January 2009. Then, the NDAA 2009 
extended the SOC through December 2009.[Footnote 12] 

Table 1: Overview of the Senior Oversight Committee's LOAs: 

LOAs: LOA 1: Disability Evaluation System; 
Responsibilities: Addresses efforts to reform the DOD and VA disability 
evaluation systems. 

LOAs: LOA 2: Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)/Post Traumatic Stress 
Disorder (PTSD); 
Responsibilities: Addresses issues related to TBI/PTSD. 

LOAs: LOA 3: Case Management; 
Responsibilities: Addresses care, management, and transition of 
recovering servicemembers from recovery to rehabilitation and 
reintegration. 

LOAs: LOA 4: DOD/VA Data Sharing; 
Responsibilities: Addresses issues regarding the electronic exchange of 
DOD and VA health records. 

LOAs: LOA 5: Facilities; 
Responsibilities: Address issues relating to military and VA medical 
facilities. 

LOAs: LOA 6: Clean Sheet Review; 
Responsibilities: Develops recommendations to improve care and benefits 
without the constraints of existing laws, regulations, organizational 
roles, personnel constraints or budgets. 

LOAs: LOA 7: Legislation and Public Affairs; 
Responsibilities: Addresses legal and other issues for policy 
development. 

LOAs: LOA 8: Personnel, Pay, and Financial Support; 
Responsibilities: Addresses compensation and benefit issues. 

Source: GAO analysis of SOC documents and interviews with SOC 
officials. 

[End of table] 

In addition to addressing the published recommendations, the SOC 
assumed responsibility for addressing the policy development and 
reporting requirements contained in the NDAA 2008. Section 1611(a) of 
the NDAA 2008 directs DOD and VA, to the extent feasible, to develop 
and implement a comprehensive policy covering four areas--(1) care and 
management, (2) medical evaluation and disability evaluation, (3) the 
return of servicemembers to active duty, and (4) the transition of 
recovering servicemembers from DOD to VA. The specific requirements for 
each of these four areas are further enumerated in sections 1611 
through 1614 of the law and would include the development of multiple 
policies. Table 2 summarizes the requirements for the jointly developed 
policies. 

Table 2: Summary of the NDAA 2008 Requirements to Jointly Develop 
Comprehensive Policy for Improving Care and Management, Medical and 
Disability Evaluation, Return-to-Duty Decisions, and Transition of 
Recovering Servicemembers in Sections 1611 through 1614: 

Key areas of policy development: Care and management of recovering 
servicemembers (section 1611); 
Summary of requirement: Requires DOD and VA to develop policies to 
address several aspects of access to health care and other assistance, 
including the training of health care professionals, waiting times, 
patient tracking, and family support. 

Key areas of policy development: Medical evaluation and disability 
evaluation of recovering servicemembers (section 1612); 
Summary of requirement: Requires DOD to develop policies for improved 
medical evaluations, DOD and VA to develop policies for improved 
disability evaluations and report to Congress on the feasibility and 
advisability of consolidating their disability evaluation systems. 

Key areas of policy development: Return of servicemembers who have 
recovered to active duty (section 1613); 
Summary of requirement: Requires DOD to establish standards for 
determinations by the military departments on the return of recovering 
servicemembers to active duty. 

Key areas of policy development: Transition of recovering 
servicemembers from receipt of care and services through DOD to receipt 
of care and services through VA (section 1614); 
Summary of requirement: Requires DOD and VA to jointly develop and 
implement procedures and standards for the transition of servicemembers 
from health care and treatment provided through DOD to care, treatment, 
and rehabilitation provided through VA. 

Source: GAO analysis of sections 1611 through 1614 of the NDAA 2008. 

[End of table] 

Selected Initiatives of the SOC: 

Since its inception, the SOC has completed many initiatives, such as 
establishing the Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health 
and Traumatic Brain Injury and creating a National Resource Directory, 
which is an online resource for recovering servicemembers, veterans, 
and their families. In addition, the SOC has undertaken initiatives 
specifically related to the requirements contained in sections 1611 
through 1614 of the NDAA 2008. Specifically, the SOC supported the 
development of several programs to improve the care and management of 
benefits to recovering servicemembers, including the disability 
evaluation system pilot and the Federal Recovery Coordination Program. 
These programs are currently in pilot or beginning phases: 

* Disability evaluation system pilot: DOD and VA are piloting a joint 
disability evaluation system to improve the timeliness and resource use 
of their separate disability evaluation systems. Key features of the 
pilot include a single physical examination conducted to VA standards 
by the medical evaluation board that documents medical conditions that 
may limit a servicemember's ability to serve in the military, 
disability ratings prepared by VA for use by both DOD and VA in 
determining disability benefits, and additional outreach and 
nonclinical case management provided by VA staff at the DOD pilot 
locations to explain VA results and processes to servicemembers. DOD 
and VA anticipate a final report on the pilot in August 2009. 

* Federal Recovery Coordination Program: In 2007, DOD and VA 
established the Federal Recovery Coordination Program in response to 
the report by the President's Commission on Care for America's 
Returning Wounded Warriors, commonly referred to as the Dole-Shalala 
Commission. The commission's report highlighted the need for better 
coordination of care and additional support for families. The Federal 
Recovery Coordination Program serves the most severely injured or ill 
servicemembers, or those who are catastrophically injured. These 
servicemembers are highly unlikely to be able to return to duty and 
will have to adjust to permanent disabling conditions. The program was 
created to provide uniform and seamless care, management, and 
transition of recovering servicemembers and their families by assigning 
recovering servicemembers to coordinators who manage the development 
and implementation of a recovery plan. Each servicemember enrolled in 
the Federal Recovery Coordination Program has a Federal Individual 
Recovery Plan, which tracks care, management, and transition through 
recovery, rehabilitation, and reintegration. Although the Federal 
Recovery Coordination Program is operated as a joint DOD and VA 
program, VA is responsible for the administrative duties and program 
personnel are employees of the agency. 

Beyond these specific initiatives, the SOC took responsibility for 
issues related to electronic health records through the work of LOA 4, 
the SOC's work group focused on DOD and VA data sharing. This LOA also 
addressed issues more generally focused on joint DOD and VA data needs, 
including developing components for the disability evaluation system 
pilot and the individual recovery plans for the Federal Recovery 
Coordination Program. LOA 4's progress on these issues was monitored 
and overseen by the SOC. The NDAA 2008 established an interagency 
program office (IPO) to serve as a single point of accountability for 
both departments in the development and implementation of interoperable 
electronic health records.[Footnote 13],[Footnote 14] Subsequently, 
management oversight of many of LOA 4's responsibilities were 
transferred to the IPO. Also, the IPO's scope of responsibility was 
broadened to include personnel and benefits data sharing between DOD 
and VA. 

DOD and VA Have Completed the Majority of the Requirements to Jointly 
Develop Policies on Care and Management, Medical and Disability 
Evaluation, Return to Active Duty, and the Transition from DOD to VA: 

As of April 2009, DOD and VA have completed 60 of the 76 requirements 
we identified for jointly developing policies for recovering 
servicemembers on (1) care and management, (2) medical and disability 
evaluation, (3) return to active duty, and (4) servicemember transition 
from DOD to VA. The two departments have completed all requirements for 
developing policy for two of the policy areas--medical and disability 
evaluation and return to active duty. Of the 16 requirements that are 
in progress, 10 are related to care and management and 6 are related to 
servicemembers transitioning from DOD to VA. (See table 3.) 

Table 3: Summary of Status of DOD and VA Progress to Jointly Develop 
Policy for Improving Care and Management, Medical and Disability 
Evaluation, Return-to-Duty Decisions, and Transition of Recovering 
Servicemembers Required by the NDAA 2008 Sections 1611 through 1614, as 
of April 2009: 

Policy area: 1. Care and management of recovering servicemembers 
(section 1611); 
Number of requirements: 38; 
Requirements completed: 28; 
Requirements in progress: 10; 
Overall status: In progress. 

Policy area: 2. Medical evaluation and disability evaluation of 
recovering servicemembers (section 1612); 
Number of requirements: 18; 
Requirements completed: 18; 
Requirements in progress: 0; 
Overall status: Complete. 

Policy area: 3. Return of servicemembers who have recovered to active 
duty (section 1613); 
Number of requirements: 1; 
Requirements completed: 1; 
Requirements in progress: 0; 
Overall status: Complete. 

Policy area: 4. Transition of recovering servicemembers from receipt of 
care and services through DOD to receipt of care and services through 
VA (section 1614); 
Number of requirements: 19; 
Requirements completed: 13; 
Requirements in progress: 6; 
Overall status: In progress. 

Policy area: Overall progress; 
Number of requirements: 76; 
Requirements completed: 60 (79 percent); 
Requirements in progress: 16 (21 percent); 
Overall status: In progress. 

Source: GAO analysis of information from the SOC. 

[End of table] 

DOD and VA Have Completed More Than Two-Thirds of the Requirements 
Regarding the Care and Management of Recovering Servicemembers: 

We found that more than two-thirds of the requirements for DOD's and 
VA's joint policy development to improve the care and management of 
recovering servicemembers have been completed while the remaining 
requirements are in progress. (See table 4.) We identified 38 
requirements for this policy area and grouped them into five 
categories. Although 28 of the 38 requirements had been completed, one 
category--improving access to medical and other health care services-- 
had most of its requirements in progress. 

Table 4: Status of Requirements to Address the Care and Management of 
Recovering Servicemembers, as of April 2009: 

Categories of requirements for care and management: 1. Develop policy 
for training and skills of health care professionals, recovery care 
coordinators, medical care case managers, and non-medical care 
managers[A]; 
Number of requirements: 2; 
Requirements completed: 2; 
Requirements in progress: 0; 
Overall status: Complete. 

Categories of requirements for care and management: 2. Develop policy 
for recovery plans for recovering servicemembers and the training, 
duties, support, and supervision of recovery care coordinators, medical 
care case managers, and non-medical care managers[B]; 
Number of requirements: 20; 
Requirements completed: 19; 
Requirements in progress: 1; 
Overall status: In progress. 

Categories of requirements for care and management: 3. Develop policy 
for improved access to medical and other health care services[C]; 
Number of requirements: 10; 
Requirements completed: 1; 
Requirements in progress: 9; 
Overall status: In progress. 

Categories of requirements for care and management: 4. Develop policy 
for improved outreach and services for family members of recovering 
servicemembers[D]; 
Number of requirements: 5; 
Requirements completed: 5; 
Requirements in progress: 0; 
Overall status: Complete. 

Categories of requirements for care and management: 5. Apply policy to 
recovering servicemembers on the temporary disability retired list as 
determined by DOD[E]; 
Number of requirements: 1; 
Requirements completed: 1; 
Requirements in progress: 0; 
Overall status: Complete. 

Categories of requirements for care and management: Overall progress; 
Number of requirements: 38; 
Requirements completed: 28 (74 percent); 
Requirements in progress: 10 (26 percent); 
Overall status: Complete. 

Source: GAO analysis of information from the SOC. 

[A] NDAA 2008, Section 1611(d). 

[B] NDAA 2008, Section 1611(e)(1) - (4). 

[C] NDAA 2008, Section 1611(e)(5) - (11). 

[D] NDAA 2008, Section 1611(f)(g). 

[E] NDAA 2008, Section 1611(h). 

[End of table] 

Most of the completed requirements were addressed in DOD's January 2009 
Directive-Type Memorandum (DTM), which was developed in consultation 
with VA.[Footnote 15] This DTM, entitled Recovery Coordination Program: 
Improvements to the Care, Management, and Transition of Recovering 
Service Members, establishes interim policy for the improvements to the 
care, management, and transition of recovering servicemembers in 
response to sections 1611 and 1614 of the NDAA 2008. In consultation 
with VA, DOD created the Recovery Coordination Program in response to 
the NDAA 2008 requirements. This program, which was launched in 
November 2008, extended the same comprehensive coordination and 
transition support provided under the Federal Recovery Coordination 
Program to servicemembers who were less severely injured or ill, yet 
who still were unlikely to return to duty and continue their careers in 
the military. This program follows the same structured process as the 
Federal Recovery Coordination Program. However, DOD oversees this 
program and the coordinators are DOD employees. 

DOD's January 2009 DTM includes information on the scope and program 
elements of the Recovery Coordination Program as well as on the roles 
and responsibilities of the recovery care coordinators, federal 
recovery coordinators, and medical care case managers and non-medical 
care managers. According to DOD officials, DOD took the lead in 
developing policy to address the requirements for care and management 
because it interpreted most of the requirements to refer to active duty 
servicemembers. 

According to DOD and VA officials, the January 2009 DTM serves as the 
interim policy for care, management, and transition until the 
completion of DOD's comprehensive policy instruction, which is 
estimated to be completed by June 2009.[Footnote 16] This policy 
instruction will contain more detailed information on the policies 
outlined in the DTM. A VA official told us that VA also plans to issue 
related policy guidance as part of a VA handbook in June 2009. The VA 
official noted that the final form of the policy document would 
correspond with DOD's instruction. 

DOD and VA Have Completed All of the Requirements for Developing Policy 
on the Medical Evaluation and Disability Evaluation of Recovering 
Servicemembers: 

DOD and VA have completed all of the requirements for developing policy 
to improve the medical and physical disability evaluation of recovering 
servicemembers. (See table 5.) We identified 18 requirements for this 
policy area and grouped them into three categories: (1) policy for 
improved medical evaluations, (2) policy for improved physical 
disability evaluations, and (3) reporting on the feasibility and 
advisability of consolidating DOD and VA disability evaluation systems. 

Table 5: Status of Requirements to Address the Medical Evaluation and 
Disability Evaluation of Recovering Servicemembers, as of April 2009: 

Categories of requirements for medical and disability evaluations: 1. 
Develop policy for improved medical evaluations[A]; 
Number of requirements: 8; 
Requirements completed: 8; 
Requirements in progress: 0; 
Overall status: Complete. 

Categories of requirements for medical and disability evaluations: 2. 
Develop policy for improved physical disability evaluations[B]; 
Number of requirements: 8; 
Requirements completed: 8; 
Requirements in progress: 0; 
Overall status: Complete. 

Categories of requirements for medical and disability evaluations: 3. 
Report on feasibility and advisability of consolidating DOD and VA 
disability evaluation systems[C]; 
Number of requirements: 2; 
Requirements completed: 2; 
Requirements in progress: 0; 
Overall status: Complete. 

Categories of requirements for medical and disability evaluations: 
Overall progress; 
Number of requirements: 18; 
Requirements completed: 18 (100 percent); 
Requirements in progress: 0; 
Overall status: Complete. 

Source: GAO analysis of information from the SOC. 

[A] NDAA 2008, Section 1612(a). 

[B] NDAA 2008, Section 1612(b). 

[C] NDAA 2008, Section 1612(c). 

[End of table] 

DOD issued a series of memoranda that addressed the first two 
categories starting in May 2007. These memoranda, some of which were 
developed in collaboration with VA, contained policies and implementing 
guidance to improve DOD's existing disability evaluation system. To 
address the third category in this policy area, DOD and VA have issued 
a report to Congress that describes the organizing framework for 
consolidating the two departments' disability evaluation systems and 
states that the departments are hopeful that consolidation would be 
feasible and advisable even though the evaluation of this approach 
through the disability evaluation system pilot is still ongoing. 
According to an agency official, further assessment of the feasibility 
and advisability of consolidation will be conducted. DOD and VA 
anticipate issuing a final report on the pilot in August 2009. However, 
as we reported in September 2008, it was unclear what specific criteria 
DOD and VA will use to evaluate the success of the pilot, and when 
sufficient data will be available to complete such an evaluation. 
[Footnote 17] 

DOD Has Completed Establishing Standards for Determining the Return of 
Recovering Servicemembers to Active Duty: 

DOD has completed the requirement for establishing standards for 
determining the return of recovering servicemembers to active duty. 
(See table 6.)[Footnote 18] 

Table 6: Status of Requirement to Address the Standards for Return-to- 
Duty Decisions, as of April 2009: 

Requirement for return-to-duty decisions: 1. Establish standards for 
return-to-duty decisions[A]; 
Number of requirements: 1; 
Requirements completed: 1; 
Requirements in progress: 0; 
Overall status: Complete. 

Requirement for return-to-duty decisions: Overall progress; 
Number of requirements: 1; 
Requirements completed: 1 (100 percent); 
Requirements in progress: 0; 
Overall status: Complete. 

Source: GAO analysis of information from the SOC. 

[A] NDAA 2008, Section 1613. 

[End of table] 

On March 13, 2008, DOD issued a DTM amending its existing policy on 
retirement or separation due to a physical disability. The revised 
policy states that the disability evaluation system will be the 
mechanism for determining both retirement or separation and return to 
active duty because of a physical disability. An additional revision to 
the existing DOD policy allows DOD to consider requests for permanent 
limited active duty or reserve status for servicemembers who have been 
determined to be unfit because of a physical disability. Previously, 
DOD could consider such cases only as exceptions to the general policy. 

According to a DOD official, it is too early to tell whether the 
revisions will have an effect on retirement rates or return-to-duty 
rates. DOD annually assesses the disability evaluation system and 
tracks retirement and return to duty rates. However, because of the 
length of time a servicemember takes to move through the disability 
evaluation system--sometimes over a year--it will take a while before 
changes due to the policy revisions register in the annual assessment 
of the disability evaluation system. 

Over Two-Thirds of the Requirements for Improving the Transition of 
Recovering Servicemembers from DOD to VA Have Been Completed: 

DOD and VA have completed more than two-thirds of the requirements for 
developing procedures, processes, or standards for improving the 
transition of recovering servicemembers. (See table 7.) We identified 
19 requirements for this policy area, and we grouped them into five 
categories. We found that 13 of the 19 policy requirements have been 
completed, including all of the requirements for two of the categories-
-the development of a process for a joint separation and evaluation 
physical examination and development of procedures for surveys and 
other mechanisms to measure patient and family satisfaction with 
services for recovering servicemembers. The remaining three categories 
contain requirements that are still in progress. 

Table 7: Status of Requirements to Address the Transition of Recovering 
Servicemembers, as of April 2009: 

Categories of requirements for improved transition: 1. Develop 
procedures, processes, and standards for care coordination, benefits, 
and service transition[A]; 
Number of requirements: 11; 
Requirements completed: 7; 
Requirements in progress: 4; 
Overall status: In progress. 

Categories of requirements for improved transition: 2. Develop 
procedures and processes for information sharing of military service 
and health records[B]; 
Number of requirements: 5; 
Requirements completed: 4; 
Requirements in progress: 1; 
Overall status: In progress. 

Categories of requirements for improved transition: 3. Develop a 
process for a joint separation and evaluation physical examination[C]; 
Number of requirements: 1; 
Requirements completed: 1; 
Requirements in progress: 0; 
Overall status: Complete. 

Categories of requirements for improved transition: 4. Develop 
procedures for surveys and other mechanisms to measure patient and 
family satisfaction with services for recovering servicemembers[D]; 
Number of requirements: 1; 
Requirements completed: 1; 
Requirements in progress: 0; 
Overall status: Complete. 

Categories of requirements for improved transition: 5. Develop 
procedures to ensure the participation of recovering servicemembers of 
the National Guard or Reserve in the Benefits Delivery at Discharge 
Program[E, F]; 
Number of requirements: 1; 
Requirements completed: 0; 
Requirements in progress: 1; 
Overall status: In progress. 

Categories of requirements for improved transition: Overall progress; 
Number of requirements: 19; 
Requirements completed: 13 (68 percent); 
Requirements in progress: 6 (32 percent); 
Overall status: In progress. 

Source: GAO analysis of information from the SOC. 

[A] NDAA 2008, 1614(a), 1614(b)(1)-(9), (14). 

[B] NDAA 2008, 1614(b)(10)-(13), (15). 

[C] NDAA 2008, 1614(b)(16). 

[D] NDAA 2008, 1614(b)(17). 

[E] NDAA 2008, 1614(b)(18). 

[F] Through the Benefits Delivery at Discharge program, DOD and VA have 
made efforts to streamline access to veterans' disability benefits by 
allowing some servicemembers to file a claim and obtain a single 
comprehensive exam prior to discharge. 

[End of table] 

Most of the requirements for improving the transition from DOD to VA 
were addressed in DOD's January 2009 DTM--Recovery Coordination 
Program: Improvements to the Care, Management, and Transition of 
Recovering Service Members--that establishes interim policy for the 
care, management, and transition of recovering servicemembers through 
the Recovery Coordination Program. However, we found that DOD's DTM 
includes limited detail related to the procedures, processes, and 
standards for transition of recovering servicemembers. As a result, we 
could not always directly link the interim policy in the DTM to the 
specific requirements contained in section 1614 of the NDAA 2008. DOD 
and VA officials noted that they will be further developing the 
procedures, processes, and standards for the transition of recovering 
servicemembers in a subsequent comprehensive policy instruction, which 
is estimated to be completed by June 2009. A VA official reported that 
VA plans to separately issue policy guidance addressing the 
requirements for transitioning servicemembers from DOD to VA in June 
2009. 

DOD and VA Officials Experienced Challenges during Joint Development 
and Initial Implementation of Required Policies: 

DOD and VA officials told us that they experienced numerous challenges 
as they worked to jointly develop policies to improve the care, 
management, and transition of recovering servicemembers. According to 
officials, these challenges contributed to the length of time required 
to issue policy guidance, and in some cases the challenges have not yet 
been completely resolved. In addition, challenges have arisen during 
the initial implementation of some of the NDAA 2008 policies. Finally, 
recent changes to the SOC staff, including DOD's organizational changes 
for staff supporting the SOC, could pose challenges to the development 
of policy affecting recovering servicemembers. 

Various Challenges Arose during Policy Development: 

DOD and VA officials encountered numerous challenges during the course 
of jointly developing policies to improve the care, management, and 
transition of recovering servicemembers, as required by sections 1611 
through 1614 of the NDAA 2008, in addition to responding to other 
requirements of the law. Many of these challenges have been addressed, 
but some have yet to be completely resolved. DOD and VA officials cited 
the following examples of issues for which policy development was 
particularly challenging. 

* Increased support for family caregivers. The NDAA 2008 includes a 
number of provisions to strengthen support for families of recovering 
servicemembers, including those who become caregivers. However, DOD and 
VA officials on a SOC work group stated that before they could develop 
policy to increase support for such families, they had to obtain 
concrete evidence of their needs. Officials explained that while they 
did have anecdotal information about the impact on families who provide 
care to recovering servicemembers, they lacked the systematic data 
needed for sound policy decisions--such as frequency of job loss and 
the economic value of family-provided medical services. A work group 
official told us that their proposals for increasing support to family 
caregivers were rejected twice by the SOC, due in part to the lack of 
systematic data on what would be needed. The work group then contracted 
with researchers to obtain substantiating evidence, a study that 
required 18 months to complete. In January 2009, the SOC approved the 
work group's third proposal and family caregiver legislation is being 
prepared, with anticipated implementation of new benefits for 
caregivers in fiscal year 2010. 

* Establishing standard definitions for operational terms. One of the 
important tasks facing the SOC was the need to standardize key 
terminology relevant to policy issues affecting recovering 
servicemembers. DOD took the lead in working with its military services 
and VA officials to identify and define key terms. DOD and VA officials 
told us that many of the key terms found in existing DOD and VA policy, 
the reports from the review groups, and the NDAA 2008, as well as those 
used by the different military services are not uniformly defined. 
Consequently, standardized definitions are needed to promote agreement 
on issues such as: 

- identifying the recovering servicemembers who are subject to NDAA 
2008 requirements, 

- identifying categories of servicemembers who would receive services 
from the different classes of case managers or be eligible for certain 
benefits, 

- managing aspects of the disability evaluation process, and: 

- establishing criteria to guide research. 

In some cases, standardized definitions were critical to policy 
development. The importance of agreement on key terms is illustrated by 
an issue encountered by the SOC's work group responsible for family 
support policy. In this case, before policy could be developed for 
furnishing additional support to family members that provide medical 
care to recovering servicemembers, the definition of "family" had to be 
agreed upon. DOD and VA officials said that they considered two 
options: to define the term narrowly to include a servicemember's 
spouse, parents, and children, or to use broader definitions that 
included distant relatives and unrelated individuals with a connection 
to the servicemember. These two definitions would result in 
significantly different numbers of family members eligible to receive 
additional support services. DOD and VA officials decided to use a 
broader definition to determine who would be eligible for support. 

Of the 41 key definitions identified for reconciliation, DOD and VA had 
concurred on 33 as of March 2009 and these 33 standardized definitions 
are now being used. Disagreement remains over the remaining 
definitions, including the definition of "mental health." A DOD 
official stated that given the uncertainty associated with the 
organizational and procedural changes recently introduced to the SOC 
(which are discussed below), obtaining concurrence on the remaining 
definitions has been given lower priority. 

* Improving TBI and PTSD screening and treatment. Requirements related 
to screening and treatment for TBI and PTSD were embedded in several 
sections of the NDAA 2008, including section 1611, and were also 
discussed extensively in a task force report on mental health.[Footnote 
19] DOD and VA officials told us that policy development for these 
issues was difficult. For example, during development of improved TBI 
and PTSD treatment policy, policymakers often lacked sufficient 
scientific information needed to help achieve consensus on policy 
decisions. Also, members of the SOC work group told us that they 
disagreed on appropriate models for screening and treatment and 
struggled to reorient the military services to patient-focused 
treatment. A senior DOD official stated that the adoption of patient- 
focused models is particularly difficult for the military services 
because, historically, the needs of the military have been given 
precedence over the needs of individual servicemembers. To address 
these challenges, the SOC oversaw the creation of the Defense Centers 
of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury--a 
partnership between DOD and VA. While policies continue to be developed 
on these issues, TBI and PTSD policy remains a challenge for DOD and 
VA. However, DOD officials told us that the centers of excellence have 
made progress with reducing knowledge gaps in psychological health and 
TBI treatment, identifying best practices, and establishing clinical 
standards of care. 

* Release of psychological health treatment records to DOD by VA health 
care providers who treat members of the National Guard and Reserves. 
Section 1614 of the NDAA 2008 requires the departments to improve 
medical and support services provided to members of the National Guard 
and Reserves. In pursuing these objectives, VA faced challenges related 
to the release of medical information to DOD on reservists and National 
Guard servicemembers who have received treatment for PTSD or other 
mental health conditions from VA. DOD requests medical information from 
VA to help make command decisions about the reactivation of 
servicemembers, but VA practitioners face an ethical dilemma if the 
disclosure of medical treatment could compromise servicemembers' 
medical conditions, particularly for those at risk of suicide. The 
challenge of sharing and protecting sensitive medical information on 
servicemembers who obtain treatment at VA was reviewed by the Blue 
Ribbon Work Group on Suicide Prevention convened in 2008 at the behest 
of the Secretary of Veterans Affairs. DOD and VA are continuing their 
efforts to develop policy to clarify the privacy rights of patients who 
receive medical services from VA while serving in the military, and 
also for protecting the confidential records of VA patients who may 
also be treated by the military's health care system. The need to 
resolve this challenge assumes even greater importance in light of 
DOD's and VA's increasing capability to exchange medical records 
electronically, which will expand DOD's ability to access records of 
servicemembers who have received medical treatment from VA. 

Future Challenges Could Impede the Joint Implementation of Policy 
Initiatives: 

In addition to challenges encountered during the joint development of 
policy for recovering servicemembers, additional challenges have arisen 
as DOD and VA have begun implementing NDAA 2008 policy initiatives. 

* Medical examinations conducted as part of the DOD/VA disability 
evaluation system pilot. In 2007, DOD and VA jointly began to develop 
policy to improve the disability evaluation process for recovering 
servicemembers and began pilot testing these new procedures in the 
disability system. One significant innovation of the disability 
evaluation system pilot is the use of a single physical examination for 
multiple purposes, such as for both disability determinations and 
disability benefits from both departments. In our review of the 
disability evaluation system pilot, we reported that DOD and VA had 
tracked challenges that arose during implementation of the pilot but 
had not yet resolved all of them.[Footnote 20] For example, one 
unresolved issue was uncertainty about who will conduct the single 
physical examination when a VA medical center is not located nearby. 
Another challenge that could emerge in the future is linked to VA's 
announcement in November 2008 that it would cease providing physical 
reexaminations for recovering servicemembers placed on the Temporary 
Disability Retired List (TDRL).[Footnote 21] However, VA made an 
exception to its decision and will continue to provide reexaminations 
for TDRL servicemembers participating in the disability evaluation 
system pilot. In March 2009, VA officials told us that they were 
developing a policy to clarify this issue. 

* Electronic health information sharing between DOD and VA. The two 
departments have been working for over a decade to share electronic 
health information and have continued to make progress toward increased 
information sharing through ongoing initiatives and activities. 
However, the departments continue to face challenges in managing the 
activities required to achieve this goal. As we previously reported, 
[Footnote 22] the departments' plans to further increase their 
electronic sharing capabilities do not consistently identify results- 
oriented performance measures, which are essential for assessing 
progress toward the delivery of that capability.[Footnote 23] Further 
challenging the departments is the need to complete all necessary 
activities to fully set up their IPO, including hiring a permanent 
Director and Deputy Director. Defining results-oriented performance 
goals in its plans and ensuring that they are met is an important 
responsibility of this office. Until these challenges are fully 
addressed, the departments and their stakeholders may lack the 
comprehensive understanding that they need to effectively manage their 
progress toward achieving increased sharing of information between the 
departments. Moreover, not fully addressing these challenges increases 
the risk that DOD and VA may not develop and implement comprehensive 
policies to improve the care, management, and transition of recovering 
servicemembers and veterans. 

Changes to the SOC's Staff and Scope of Policy Development 
Responsibilities Could Pose Future Challenges: 

Recent changes to staff and working relationships within the SOC could 
pose future challenges to DOD's and VA's efforts to develop joint 
policy. Since December 2008, the SOC has experienced turnover in 
leadership and changes in policy development responsibilities. The SOC 
is undergoing leadership changes caused by the turnover in presidential 
administrations as well as turnover in some of its key staff. For 
example, the DOD and VA deputy secretaries who previously co-chaired 
the SOC departed in January 2009. As a short-term measure, the 
Secretaries of VA and DOD have co-chaired a SOC meeting. 

DOD also introduced other staffing changes to replace personnel who had 
been temporarily detailed to the SOC and needed to return to their 
primary duties. DOD had relied on temporarily-assigned staff to meet 
SOC staffing needs because the SOC was originally envisioned as a short-
term effort. In a December 2008 memo, DOD outlined the realignment of 
its SOC staff. This included the transition of responsibilities from 
detailed, temporary SOC staff and executives to permanent staff in 
existing DOD offices that managed similar issues. For example, the 
functions of LOA 7 (Legislation and Public Affairs) will now be 
overseen by the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Legislative Affairs, 
the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs, and the DOD 
General Counsel. DOD also established two new organizational 
structures--the Office of Transition Policy and Care Coordination and 
an Executive Secretariat office. The Office of Transition Policy and 
Care Coordination oversees transition support for all servicemembers 
and serves as the permanent entity for issues being addressed by LOA 1 
(Disability Evaluation System), LOA 3 (Case Management), and LOA 8 
(Personnel, Pay, and Financial Support). The Executive Secretariat 
office is responsible for performance planning, performance management, 
and SOC support functions. According to DOD officials, the new offices 
were created to establish permanent organizations that address a 
specific set of issues and to enhance accountability for policy 
development and implementation as these offices report directly to the 
Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness. 
Currently, many of the positions in these new offices, including the 
director positions, are staffed by officials in an acting capacity or 
are unfilled. 

DOD's changes to the SOC are important because of the potential effects 
these changes could have on the development of policy for recovering 
servicemembers. However, officials in both DOD and VA have mixed 
reactions about the consequences of these changes. Some DOD officials 
consider the organizational changes to the SOC to be positive 
developments that will enhance the SOC's effectiveness. They point out 
that the SOC's temporary staffing situation needed to be addressed, and 
also that the two new offices were created to support the SOC and 
provide focus on the implementation of key policy initiatives developed 
by the SOC--primarily the disability evaluation system pilot and the 
new case management programs. In contrast, others are concerned by 
DOD's changes, stating that the new organizations disrupt the unity of 
command that once characterized the SOC's management because personnel 
within the SOC organization now report to three different officials 
within DOD and VA. However, it is too soon to determine how well DOD's 
new structure will work in conjunction with the SOC. DOD and VA 
officials we spoke with told us that the SOC's work groups continue to 
carry out their roles and responsibilities. 

Finally, according to DOD and VA officials, the roles and scope of 
responsibilities of both the SOC and the DOD and VA Joint Executive 
Council appear to be in flux and may evolve further still.[Footnote 24] 
According to DOD and VA officials, changes to the oversight 
responsibilities of the SOC and the Joint Executive Council are causing 
confusion. While the SOC will remain responsible for policy matters 
directly related to recovering servicemembers, a number of policy 
issues may now be directed to the Joint Executive Council, including 
issues that the SOC had previously addressed. For example, management 
oversight of many of LOA 4's responsibilities (DOD and VA Data Sharing) 
has transitioned from the SOC to the IPO, which reports primarily to 
the Joint Executive Council. LOA 4 continues to be responsible for 
developing a component for the disability evaluation system 
pilot[Footnote 25] and the individual recovery plans for the Federal 
Recovery Coordination Program. It is not clear how the IPO will ensure 
effective coordination with the SOC's LOAs for the development of IT 
applications for these initiatives. Given that IT support for two key 
SOC initiatives is identified in the joint DOD/VA Information 
Interoperability Plan, if the IPO and the SOC do not effectively 
coordinate with one another, the result may impact negatively on the 
development of improved policies for recovering servicemembers. 

Mr. Chairman, this completes our prepared remarks. We would be happy to 
respond to any questions you or other members of the Subcommittee may 
have at this time. 

Contacts and Acknowledgments: 

For further information about this testimony, please contact Randall B. 
Williamson at (202) 512-7114 or williamsonr@gao.gov, Daniel Bertoni at 
(202) 512-7215 or bertonid@gao.gov, or Valerie C. Melvin at (202) 512- 
6304 or melvinv@gao.gov. Contact points for our Offices of 
Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last 
page of this testimony. GAO staff who made key contributions to this 
testimony are listed in appendix II. 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Summary of Selected Requirements from the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008: 

To summarize the status of the Departments' of Defense (DOD) and 
Veterans Affairs (VA) efforts to jointly develop policies for each of 
the four policy areas outlined in sections 1611 through 1614 of the 
NDAA 2008, we identified 76 requirements in these sections and grouped 
related requirements into 14 logical categories.[Footnote 26] Tables 8 
through 11 enumerate the requirements in each of GAO's categories and 
provide the status of DOD and VA's efforts to develop policy related to 
each requirement, as of April 2009. 

Table 8: Requirements to Address the Care and Management of Recovering 
Servicemembers, as Outlined in Section 1611(a)(2)(A), with Specific 
Requirements Enumerated in Section 1611: 

GAO category: Develop policy for training and skills of health care 
professionals, recovery care coordinators, medical care case managers, 
and non-medical care managers; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 2 requirements; 
Summary of NDAA 2008 requirements: 1611(d): Policy shall provide for 
uniform standards among the military departments for training and 
skills of health care professionals, recovery care coordinators, 
medical care case managers, and non-medical care managers, including 
tracking notifications made by them. The policy shall: 
1. Ensure that health care professionals, recovery care coordinators, 
medical care case managers, and non-medical care managers are able to 
detect and report early warning signs of post traumatic stress disorder 
or suicidal or homicidal thoughts or behaviors in recovering 
servicemembers; Status: Complete.
2. Include a mechanism or system to track the number of notifications 
made by recovery care coordinators, medical care case managers, and non-
medical care managers to health care professionals regarding post 
traumatic stress disorder or suicidal behaviors in recovering 
servicemembers; Status: Complete. 

GAO category: Develop policy for recovery plans for recovering 
servicemembers and the training, duties, support, and supervision of 
recovery care coordinators, medical care case managers, and non-medical 
care managers; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 20 requirements; Summary 
of NDAA 2008 requirements: 1611(e)(1)-(4): To improve the care, 
management, and transition of recovering servicemembers, the policy 
shall: 
1. Provide for uniform standards and procedures among the military 
services for the development of a comprehensive recovery plan for each 
recovering servicemember; Status: Complete. 

For recovery care coordinators: 
2. Provide for a uniform program for the assignment of recovery care 
coordinators to recovering servicemembers; Status: Complete.
3. Include specified duties assigned to recovery care coordinators; 
Status: Complete.
4. Specify the maximum number of cases of recovering servicemembers 
assigned to a recovery care coordinator; Status: In progress.
5. Specify standard training requirements for recovery care 
coordinators; Status: Complete.
6. Include mechanisms to ensure recovery care coordinators have 
necessary resources; Status: Complete.
7. Specify requirements for supervision of recovery care coordinators; 
Status: Complete. 

For medical care case managers: 
8. Provide for a uniform program for the assignment of medical care 
case managers; Status: Complete.
9. Include specified duties assigned to medical care case managers; 
Status: Complete.
10. Specify the maximum number of cases of recovering servicemembers 
assigned to a medical care case manager; Status: Complete.
11. Specify standard training requirements for medical care case 
managers; Status: Complete.
12. Include mechanisms to ensure that medical care case managers have 
necessary resources; Status: [Complete].
13. Specify requirements for supervision of medical care case managers; 
Status: Complete. 

For non-medical care managers: 
14. Provide for a uniform program for the assignment of non-medical 
care managers to recovering servicemembers; Status: Complete.
15. Include specified duties assigned to non-medical care managers; 
Status: Complete.
16. Specify duration of non-medical care managers' duties; Status: 
Complete.
17. Specify the maximum number of cases of recovering servicemembers 
assigned to a non-medical care manager; Status: Complete.
18. Specify standard training requirements for non-medical care 
managers; Status: Complete.
19. Include mechanisms to ensure that non-medical care managers have 
necessary resources; Status: Complete.
20. Specify requirements for supervision of non-medical care managers; 
Status: Complete. 

GAO category: Develop policy for improved access to medical and other 
health care services; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 10 requirements; 
Summary of NDAA 2008 requirements: 1611(e)(5)-(11): Policy shall 
provide for: 
1. Appropriate minimum standards for access to non-urgent medical care 
and other health care services by recovering servicemembers in certain 
settings; Status: In progress. 
2. Maximum waiting times for follow-up, specialty, diagnostic, and 
surgical care; Status: In progress. 
3. Recovering servicemember's ability to waive access standards; 
Status: In progress. 
4. Assignment of recovering servicemembers to locations of care; 
Status: In progress. 
5. Reassignment of recovering servicemembers from deficient medical or 
medical support facilities; Status: In progress. 
6. Availability of transportation and subsistence when obtaining 
medical care and services; Status: In progress. 
7. Assignment of recovering servicemembers to work and duty compatible 
with their medical conditions; Status: In progress. 
8. Access to educational and vocational training and rehabilitation; 
Status: Complete. 
9. Tracking the location of recovering servicemembers and their 
compliance with appointments; Status: In progress. 
10. Referral of recovering servicemembers to VA and other providers; 
Status: In progress. 

GAO category: Develop policy for improved outreach and services for 
family members of recovering servicemembers; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 5 requirements; 
Summary of NDAA 2008 requirements: 1611(f) and (g): Policy shall 
provide or include: 
1. Providing support for family members not eligible under section 
1672; Status: Complete.
2. Providing advice and training to family members for providing care 
to recovering servicemembers; Status: Complete. 
3. Measuring family members' satisfaction with quality of health care 
provided to recovering servicemembers; Status: Complete. 
4. Procedures for applying for job placement services by family 
members; Status: Complete. 
5. Procedures and mechanisms for outreach to recovering servicemembers 
and family members to inform them of policies on medical care, 
management and transition of recovering servicemembers, and 
responsibilities of recovering servicemembers and families; Status: 
Complete. 

GAO category: Apply policy to recovering servicemembers on the 
Temporary Disability Retired List as determined by DOD; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 1 requirement; 
Summary of NDAA 2008 requirements: 1611(h): 
1. Policy required by this section shall apply to recovering 
servicemembers placed on the temporary disability retired list as 
determined by DOD; Status: Complete. 

Source: GAO analysis of section 1611 of the NDAA 2008. 

[End of table] 

Table 9: Requirements to Address the Medical and Disability Evaluations 
of Recovering Servicemembers, as Outlined in Section 1611(a)(2)(B), 
with Specific Requirements Enumerated in Section 1612: 

GAO category: Develop policy for improved medical evaluations; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 8 requirements; 
Summary of NDAA 2008 requirements: 1612(a): 
1. The Secretary of Defense shall develop policy to improve processes, 
procedures, and standards for medical evaluations of recovering 
servicemembers; Status: Complete. 

Policy improvements to medical evaluations shall include and address: 
2. Uniform application of medical evaluation policy throughout the 
military departments to recovering servicemembers in the regular 
components of the Armed Forces, National Guard, and Reserves; Status: 
Complete. 
3. Standard criteria and definitions for determining maximum medical 
benefit from treatment for recovering servicemembers; Status: Complete. 
4. Standard timelines for fitness-for-duty determinations, specialty 
care consultations, preparation of medical documents, and appeals of 
medical evaluation determinations; Status: Complete. 
5. Procedures to ensure assignment of a physician or health care 
professional to a recovering servicemember, if requested, who is 
independent of the medical evaluation board and provides appropriate 
advice; Status: Complete. 
6. Standards for qualifications and training of medical evaluation 
board personnel; Status: Complete. 
7. Standards for the maximum number of recovering servicemember cases 
pending before a medical evaluation board, and procedures to expand on 
medical evaluation board if warranted; Status: Complete. 
8. Standards for information provided to recovering servicemembers and 
their families regarding their rights and responsibilities in the 
medical evaluation board process; Status: Complete. 

GAO category: Develop policy for improved physical disability 
evaluations; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 8 requirements; 
Summary of NDAA 2008 requirements: 1612(b): 
1. The DOD and VA Secretaries shall develop policy to improve 
processes, procedures, and standards for physical disability 
evaluations of recovering servicemembers by DOD and VA; Status: 
Complete. 

Policy to improve physical disability evaluations shall include: 
2. A clearly-defined DOD and VA process for physical disability 
determinations for recovering servicemembers; Status: Complete. 
3. To the extent feasible, procedures to eliminate unacceptable 
discrepancies and improve consistency among disability ratings assigned 
by DOD and VA to recovering servicemembers of the Armed Forces, 
National Guard, and Reserves in the use by each military department of 
the VA disability rating schedule; Status: Complete. 
4. Uniform timelines for appeals of disability determinations of 
recovering servicemembers; Status: Complete. 
5. Uniform standards for qualifications and training of physical 
disability evaluation board personnel; Status: Complete. 
6. Uniform standards for the maximum number of recovering servicemember 
cases pending before a physical disability evaluation board, and 
procedures to expand board; Status: Complete. 
7. Uniform standards and procedures for providing legal counsel to 
recovering servicemembers undergoing physical disability evaluation; 
Status: Complete. 
8. Uniform standards on the roles and responsibilities of non-medical 
care managers and judge advocates, and the maximum number of recovering 
servicemembers assigned to judge advocates at any one time; Status: 
Complete. 

GAO category: Report on feasibility and advisability of consolidating 
DOD and VA disability evaluation processes; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 2 requirements; 
Summary of NDAA 2008 requirements: 1612(c): The DOD and VA Secretaries 
shall report on: 
1. The feasibility and advisability of consolidating the DOD and VA 
disability evaluation systems; Status: Complete. 
2. Recommendations for options for consolidating the DOD and VA 
disability evaluation systems, and recommendations for mechanisms to 
evaluate and assess progress made in consolidating the DOD and VA 
disability evaluation systems, if consolidation is considered feasible 
and advisable; Status: Complete. 

Source: GAO analysis of section 1612 of the NDAA 2008. 

[End of table] 

Table 10: Requirement to Address Standards for Return-to-Duty 
Decisions, as Outlined in Section 1611(a)(2)(C), with Specific 
Requirements Enumerated in Section 1613: 

GAO category: Establish standards for return-to-duty decisions; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 1 requirement; 
Summary of NDAA 2008 requirements: 1613: 
1. The DOD Secretary shall establish standards for determinations by 
the military departments on the return of recovering servicemembers to 
active duty; Status: Complete. 

Source: GAO analysis of section 1613 of the NDAA 2008. 

[End of table] 

Table 11: Requirements to Address the Transition of Recovering 
Servicemembers, as Outlined in Section 1611(a)(2)(D), with Specific 
Requirements Enumerated in Section 1614: 

GAO category: Develop procedures, processes, and standards for care 
coordination, benefits, and service transition; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 11 requirements; 
Summary of NDAA 2008 requirements: 1614(a), (b)(1)-(9), (14): 
1. The DOD and VA Secretaries shall jointly develop uniform processes, 
procedures, and standards for the transition of recovering 
servicemembers from DOD care to VA care and rehabilitation; Status: In 
progress. 

Processes, procedures, and standards shall include: 
2. Uniform patient-focused procedures; Status: In progress. 
3. Procedures for identifying and tracking recovering servicemembers 
during transition, and coordinating and managing their care; Status: 
Complete. 
4. Procedures for notifying VA of recovering servicemembers commencing 
the medical and the physical disability determination processes; 
Status: Complete. 
5. Procedures and timelines for enrollment of recovering servicemembers 
for health care, education, rehabilitation, and other benefits; Status: 
Complete. 
6. Procedures for ensuring recovering servicemembers' access to 
vocational, educational, and rehabilitation benefits during transition; 
Status: Complete. 
7. Standards for optimal location of DOD and VA liaison and case 
management personnel at DOD treatment and other facilities; Status: 
Complete. 
8. Standards and procedures for integrated medical care and management 
of recovering servicemembers during transition; Complete. 
9. Standards for preparation of detailed, written plans for 
transitioning recovering servicemembers from DOD treatment to VA 
treatment and rehabilitation; Status: Complete. 
10 Procedures to ensure that each recovering servicemember being 
retired or separated receives a written transition plan prior to 
retirement or separation; Status: Complete. 
11. Procedures to ensure that the VA Secretary duly considers 
statements submitted by recovering servicemembers regarding the 
transition; Status: In progress. 

GAO category: Develop procedures and processes for information sharing 
of military service and health records; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 5 requirements; 
Summary of NDAA 2008 requirements: 1614(b)(10)-(13), (15): The DOD and 
VA Secretaries shall jointly develop uniform processes, procedures, and 
standards for: 
1. Transmittal of necessary records and information of each recovering 
servicemember being retired or separated from DOD to VA, including 
military service and medical records, information for entitlement to 
transitional health care or benefits, and request for assistance in 
application for VA health benefits, compensation, or vocational 
rehabilitation; Status: In progress. 
2. Obtaining authorization by recovering servicemember or legal 
representative for transmittal of medical records from DOD to VA in 
accordance with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act 
of 1996; Status: Complete. 
3. Transmittal of address and contact information to recovering 
servicemember's state veterans' agency; Status: Complete. 
4. Arranging a meeting between the recovering servicemember, his/her 
family members, and DOD and VA representatives to discuss the transfer 
of records to VA prior to such transfer with at least 30 days notice; 
Status: Complete. 
5. Providing for VA's access to military health records of recovering 
servicemembers receiving or who anticipate receiving treatment in VA 
facilities; Status: Complete. 

GAO category: Develop a process for a joint separation and evaluation 
physical examination; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 1 requirement; 
Summary of NDAA 2008 requirements: Subsection 1614(b)(16): 
1. The DOD and VA Secretaries shall jointly develop uniform processes, 
procedures, and standards for a joint physical examination that meets 
DOD requirements for separation and VA requirements for disability 
evaluations; Status: Complete. 

GAO category: Develop procedures for surveys and other mechanisms to 
measure patient and family satisfaction with services for recovering 
servicemembers; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 1 requirement; 
Summary of NDAA 2008 requirements: Subsection 1614(b)(17): 
1. The DOD and VA Secretaries shall jointly develop uniform processes, 
procedures, and standards for surveys and other mechanisms to measure 
recovering servicemember and family satisfaction with DOD and VA care 
and services for recovering servicemembers, and to promote oversight of 
such care and services; Status: Complete. 

GAO category: Develop procedures to ensure the participation of 
recovering servicemembers of the National Guard or Reserve in the 
Benefits Delivery at Discharge Program[A]; 
Number of NDAA 2008 requirements in category: 1 requirement; 
Summary of NDAA 2008 requirements: Subsection 1614(b)(18): 
1. The DOD and VA Secretaries shall jointly develop uniform processes, 
procedures, and standards for ensuring that recovering servicemembers 
of the National Guard or Reserve participate in the Benefits Delivery 
at Discharge Program; Status: In progress. 

Source: GAO analysis of section 1614 of the NDAA 2008. 

[A] Through the Benefits Delivery at Discharge Program, DOD and VA have 
made efforts to streamline access to veterans' disability benefits by 
allowing some servicemembers to file a claim and obtain a single 
comprehensive exam prior to discharge. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contacts: 

Randall B. Williamson (202) 512-7114 or williamsonr@gao.gov: 

Daniel Bertoni (202) 512-7215 or bertonid@gao.gov: 

Valerie C. Melvin (202) 512-6304 or melvinv@gao.gov: 

Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contacts named above, Bonnie Anderson, Assistant 
Director; Mark Bird, Assistant Director; Susannah Bloch; Catina 
Bradley; April Brantley; Frederick Caison; Joel Green; Lisa Motley; 
Elise Pressma; J. Michael Resser; Regina Santucci; Kelly Shaw; Eric 
Trout; and Gregory Whitney made key contributions to this testimony. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Pub. L. No. 110-181, 122 Stat. 3. 

[2] Terri Tanielian and Lisa H. Jaycox, Invisible Wounds of War, 
Psychological and Cognitive Injuries, Their Consequences, and Services 
to Assist Recovery (Santa Monica, Calif.: RAND Corporation, 2008). 

[3] OEF, which began in October 2001, supports combat operations in 
Afghanistan and other locations, and OIF, which began in March 2003, 
supports combat operations in Iraq and other locations. 

[4] Department of Defense, Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) U.S. Casualty 
Status, Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) U.S. Casualty Status. 
[hyperlink, http://www.defenselink.mil/news/casualty.pdf]. (accessed 
Feb. 19, 2009). 

[5] GAO, DOD and VA Health Care: Challenges Encountered by Injured 
Servicemembers during Their Recovery Process, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-589T] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 5, 
2007) and DOD and VA Health Care: Challenges Encountered by Injured 
Servicemembers during Their Recovery Process, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-606T] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 8, 
2007). 

[6] Pub. L. No. 110-181, § 1615(d), 122 Stat. 3, 447. 

[7] We defined an individual requirement as a provision within sections 
1611 through 1614 related to the policy required by 1611(a) that 
directs DOD, VA, or both to take a specific action or to include a 
specific criterion in their policy. The SOC's legal counsel reviewed 
these requirements and our groupings, and agreed with our approach. 

[8] Completed policy guidance also included interim policy guidance 
signed by the SOC. 

[9] These servicemembers may also receive care at Balboa Naval Hospital 
in San Diego, California or at Brooke Army Medical Center in San 
Antonio, Texas. 

[10] VA determines the degree to which veterans are disabled in 10 
percent increments on a scale of 0 to 100 percent. 

[11] The reports are as follows: Independent Review Group, Rebuilding 
the Trust: Report on Rehabilitative Care and Administrative Processes 
at Walter Reed Army Medical Center and National Naval Medical Center 
(April 2007); Task Force on Returning Global War on Terror Heroes, 
Report to the President (April 2007); Department of Defense Task Force 
on Mental Health, An Achievable Vision: Report of the Department of 
Defense Task Force on Mental Health (June 2007); President's Commission 
on Care for America's Returning Wounded Warriors, Serve, Support, 
Simplify (July 2007); Veterans' Disability Benefits Commission, 
Honoring the Call to Duty: Veterans' Disability Benefits in the 21st 
Century (October 2007); and Inspectors General, Department of Defense, 
Department of Veterans Affairs, DOD/VA Care Transition Process for 
Service Members Injured in OIF/OEF (June 2008). 

[12] Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2009, Pub. L. No. 110-417, § 726, 122 Stat. 4356, 4509 (2008). 

[13] Pub. L. No. 110-181, § 1635, 122 Stat. 3, 460-63. 

[14] Interoperability is the ability of two or more systems or 
components to exchange information and to use the information that has 
been exchanged. 

[15] DOD and VA will also be issuing a joint directive regarding the 
policies. 

[16] DOD issues directive-type memoranda to address time-sensitive 
actions that affect current policies or that will be developed into new 
DOD policies. A directive-type memoranda establishes temporary policy 
and provides DOD the direction to implement the policy when time 
constraints prevent publishing a new policy or a change to an existing 
DOD policy. 

[17] GAO, Military Disability System: Increased Supports for 
Servicemembers and Better Pilot Planning Could Improve the Disability 
Evaluation Process, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1137] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 24, 
2008). 

[18] The NDAA 2008 directed the Secretary of Defense to respond to this 
policy requirement. VA does not participate in return-to-duty 
decisions. 

[19] Department of Defense Task Force on Mental Health (2007). 

[20] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1137]. 

[21] Recovering servicemembers may be placed on the TDRL if they are 
found to be medically unfit for duty and have service-related illnesses 
or injuries that are not stable enough for assignment of a permanent 
disability rating. Assignment to the TDRL temporarily retires and 
provides servicemembers with disability benefits for up to 5 years 
while they wait for their disabling medical conditions to stabilize. A 
TDRL retiree must undergo periodic medical reexaminations and 
evaluations every 18 months. See 10 U.S.C. §§ 1202, 1210. 

[22] GAO, Electronic Health Records: DOD's and VA's Sharing of 
Information Could Benefit from Improved Management, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-268] (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 28, 
2009). 

[23] These plans are the November 2007 VA/DOD Joint Executive Council 
Strategic Plan for Fiscal Years 2008-2010 (known as the VA/DOD Joint 
Strategic Plan) and the September 2008 DOD/VA Information 
Interoperability Plan (Version 1.0). 

[24] The Joint Executive Council is responsible for addressing 
strategic issues affecting both departments and developing a joint DOD/ 
VA strategic plan. 

[25] LOA 4 is developing a tracking system for the disability 
evaluation system pilot that tracks information about servicemembers 
such as the assignment of a physical evaluation board liaison officer 
and timeframes for completing the disability evaluation processes. 

[26] We defined an individual requirement as a provision within 
sections 1611 through 1614 related to the policy required by 1611(a) 
that directs DOD, VA, or both to take a specific action or to include a 
specific criterion in their policy. The SOC's legal counsel reviewed 
these requirements and our groupings, and agreed with our approach. 

[End of section] 

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