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From Chuck Weber, your Veteran Service Officer... |
VA Disability Benefits for Pain - 19-Year-Old-Pain Precedent Overturned |
Thousands
of veterans previously denied disability benefits for pain issues
related to their military service may now be eligible for that
assistance, thanks to a federal court ruling this week. On 4 APR, the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit overturned a 19-year-old
precedent used in more than 11,000 VA claims denials that stated
veterans had to have a clear medical diagnosis connected to their pain
in order to be eligible for those disability payouts. Advocates said the
ruling could be life-changing for individuals who are unable to work
because of service-connected injuries but excluded from veterans
assistance because of medical technicalities.
“This was an all-or-nothing issue,” said Bart Stichman, executive
director and co-founder of the National Veterans Legal Services Program
(NVLSP). “This isn’t about arguing over the degree of disability where
it is the difference of $2,000 or $3,000 a month in help. These are
people who are getting zero benefits, despite their pain.” The court
challenge, which was brought by NVLSP, involved Army veteran Melba
Saunders, who served in first Gulf War. She injured her knees during her
seven years in service, a fact that military doctors noted in her files
without determining a specific medical diagnosis of the issue. When she
left the service and applied for veterans disability benefits, her claim
was denied. VA officials acknowledged the problem stemmed from her time
in service but the Board of Veterans’ Appeals cited a 1999 Veterans
Court decision which held that “pain alone is not a disability for the
purpose of VA disability compensation.”
The new court ruling erases that precedent, at least for now. Veterans
still need to show a clear connection between their pain and their
military service to be eligible, but would no longer have to have a
specific medical reason for the pain to apply for benefits. VA officials
can appeal the decision, although it’s unclear if they will do so. In a
statement, Saunders’ lawyer, Mel Bostwick, called the court case “a
significant victory for disabled veterans” and a long-overdue correction
in VA policy. “Congress recognized that the nation owes these veterans
for their sacrifices, and the court today vindicated the common-sense
notion that this debt does not depend on whether a veteran’s disabling
pain can be labeled with a specific medical diagnosis,” she said.
Stichman said veterans who have previously been rejected for disability
benefits — or who have avoided applying in the past because they assumed
they would not be eligible — should now reapply to see if the new ruling
will allow them to qualify. “We just don’t know how many veterans this
could affect,” he said. “We know the Board of Veterans Appeals has cited
this precedent in more than 11,000 cases. But we don’t know about all
the other veterans who never even applied.”
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Source: Marine Corps Times | Leo Shane III | April 5, 2018 |
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