BOND - BOXER INTRODUCE BILL TO IMPROVE TREATMENT OF TROOPS, MILITARY FAMILIES
U.S. Senators Kit Bond (R-MO) and Barbara Boxer (D-CA), along with a bipartisan coalition of Senators, introduced legislation to keep America 's promise to our men and women in the military and their families. The Honoring Our Nation's Obligations to Returning Warriors Act - or the HONOR Act - will improve treatment for our service members and veterans suffering with mental injuries, better prepare them for the stress associated with combat, and increase care for military families. Original co-sponsors of the bill include Senators Ted Stevens (R-AK), Barack Obama (D-IL), Pete Domenici (R-NM), Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), and Elizabeth Dole (R-NC).
Senator Bond said, "The Pentagon's response to the suffering of our troops returning from combat with invisible injuries' has been deeply disappointing. We can't continue to wait for the Pentagon to do the right thing, Congress must act now and this bipartisan bill is a critical first step."
Senator Boxer said, "Too many of our service members, veterans, and their families are not getting the mental health care they deserve. This bipartisan legislation will help break down barriers to care and ensure that the necessary resources are available. It will also bring us closer to our goal of ensuring that mental injuries are treated no differently than physical injuries. I look forward to working with Senator Bond and my other colleagues to get this bill enacted into law."
Last month the RAND Corporation released findings that an estimated 620,000 returning service members suffer from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, (PTSD) Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), or both. Despite this figure, which represents about 30 percent of those who have served in combat, the Pentagon's response to the suffering of these service members and their families has been inadequate. The current military mental health system is underfunded, understaffed, and extremely difficult to navigate. Compounding this problem, there is a silent stigma on the "invisible injuries" many of our service members are suffering from when returning from combat.
In the Senate, Bond and Boxer have led efforts to improve the mental health care service members and veterans receive. Their bill will address the immediate needs of those suffering with invisible injuries and make a long-term fix to the military's mental health care system.
Provisions in the Bond-Boxer bill will:
* Give active-duty service members access to Vet Centers - the confidential community-based counseling centers veterans use for mental health care services;
* Recruit and train more behavioral health specialists to serve service members and veterans;
* Extend survivor benefits to families of military personnel who commit suicide and have a history of combat related mental health conditions, PTSD, or TBI;
* Better prepare service members for combat through a new approach which focuses on improved prevention, early detection, intervention, and treatment of PTSD;
* Help ensure that veterans who honorably served in combat receive health care benefits and that the discharge process was fair.
Crafted with the input from veterans' advocates and the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Bond-Boxer bill has broad support. Paul Rieckhoff , Executive Director of the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA) said, "Study after study has shown the rates of psychological injuries among Iraq veterans is high and rising. This bill is a crucial step in getting these wounded warriors the treatment they need - both by addressing the shortage of mental health professionals and ensuring all veterans have access to quality mental health care, like that offered by Vet Centers. IAVA thanks Senators Bond and Boxer for their dedication to supporting our troops and veterans, and wholeheartedly endorses this legislation."