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Bill > HR1725


US HR1725

US HR1725
Quicker Veterans Benefits Delivery Act of 2017


summary

Introduced
03/24/2017
In Committee
05/17/2017
Crossed Over
05/24/2017
Passed
02/28/2018
Dead
Signed/Enacted/Adopted
03/09/2018

Introduced Session

115th Congress

Bill Summary

Quicker Veterans Benefits Delivery Act of 2017 (Sec. 1) This bill requires the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), within 180 days of enactment of this bill, to submit a report on the progress of the VA's Acceptable Clinical Evidence initiative in reducing the necessity for in-person disability examinations. Such report shall include: (1) the number of claims eligible for the initiative, disaggregated by fiscal year; (2) the total number of claims eligible for the initiative that required a VA medical examiner to supplement the evidence with information obtained during a telephone interview with the claimant; (3) information on other VA initiatives to encourage the use of private medical evidence; (4) the anticipated impact on the time line and accuracy of processing claims if the VA were prohibited from requesting a private medical examination that is adequate for a claims decision; and (5) recommendations on how the VA can measure, track, and prevent the ordering of unnecessary medical examinations when a private examination has been administered. (Sec. 2) The VA shall submit by March 1 of FY2018-FY2024 an annual report that includes for each VA regional office: (1) the number of times a veteran who submitted private medical evidence in support of a claim for compensation or pension was scheduled for an examination by VA personnel because the private medical evidence was determined to be unacceptable, (2) the most common reasons for such determinations, and (3) the types of disabilities for which claims were most commonly denied when private medical evidence was submitted.

AI Summary

This bill, the Quicker Veterans Benefits Delivery Act of 2017, requires the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to submit several reports related to its efforts to reduce the need for in-person disability examinations and encourage the use of private medical evidence when processing veterans' claims for benefits. Specifically, the bill requires the VA to report on the progress of its Acceptable Clinical Evidence initiative, including the number of claims eligible for the initiative, the use of telephone interviews to supplement private medical evidence, and the anticipated impact of prohibiting the VA from requesting additional medical examinations when private evidence is submitted. The bill also requires the VA to annually report on the number of times veterans' private medical evidence was deemed unacceptable, the common reasons, and the types of disabilities most often denied when private evidence was submitted.

Committee Categories

Military Affairs and Security

Sponsors (9)

Last Action

Became Public Law No: 115-130. (TXT | PDF) (on 03/09/2018)

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