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VA Agent Orange Benefits
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Veterans Affairs Secretary Denis McDonough on Tuesday promised an “urgent” review of new rules
regarding presumptive benefits status for Vietnam veterans suffering from serious illnesses related to toxic
chemical defoliant exposure, but offered no specific timeline for when veterans may see those changes put
in place. “We’re under the gun on this, and I think that’s a good thing,” McDonough told reporters during
a press conference on 23 FEB. “I feel some urgency on this … and we are trying to get spun up on it.”
In January, officials from President Donald Trump’s VA leadership team said it could be months or
years before veterans suffering from bladder cancer, hypothyroidism and Parkinson’s-like symptoms —
three new conditions added presumptive benefits list by Congress last year — would see any benefits from
the change in law. Veterans’ advocates for years have fought for years to force the change, which would
give about 34,000 Vietnam veterans a faster path to receiving disability benefits. Past VA officials have
argued against the move in part because of lingering questions about connections between the illnesses and
chemical defoliant exposure (although National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine officials
have said the science linking the two is conclusive) and in part because of the potential cost of the move,
estimated at about $8 billion over the next 10 years.
But Congress sided with the veterans’ advocates, putting language in the fiscal 2021 National Defense
Authorization Act forcing the change. Following the bill’s passage, VA officials said the regulatory process
to implement the new rules can take up to 24 months. McDonough indicated he hopes to move much
quicker. “So many of the vets have been waiting while on this,” he said. McDonough also promised to reexamine a related issue: the connection between hypertension and Agent Orange exposure, one that medical
experts have said is strong but not as conclusive as the other approved illnesses. Adding high-blood pressure
to the presumptive list could potentially more than double the cost to VA, and benefit as many as 160,000
veterans. “People often are inclined to focus first on the cost,” McDonough said. “I want to focus first on
the facts and on the data.”
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