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Agent Orange
Paperback

Agent Orange

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In response to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the Veterans Administration’s (VA) Agent Orange examination program to determine: (1) how promptly VA examined veterans; (2) whether VA was formally notifying veterans of examination results; and (3) how reliable and complete the Agent Orange registry was. GAO found that: (1) veterans scheduled for appointments in the summer of 1984 had to wait an average of no more than 30 days at five of the eight medical centers visited; (2) at two of the centers, which did not give examinations within 30 days, delays resulted from the demand created by publicity after the settlement of an Agent Orange lawsuit; (3) at the third center, delays resulted from publicity and a heavy work load; (4) some veterans who had serious health problems were not formally notified of their problems, as required; (5) six of the eight centers visited were sending letters to veterans after their examinations most of the time; (6) one center sent letters only to veterans who did not return to discuss their laboratory test results with the physician; (7) only two centers that sent letters explained both examination and laboratory test results; (8) the computerized registry that records veterans’ symptoms is not reliable because only a restricted number of codes can be used to identify complaints; and (9) as of June 1985, about 47,600 of the over 199,400 examinations medical facilities reported had not been entered in the registry, limiting its usefulness.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Bibliogov
Country
United States
Date
23 July 2013
Pages
74
ISBN
9781289242541

In response to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the Veterans Administration’s (VA) Agent Orange examination program to determine: (1) how promptly VA examined veterans; (2) whether VA was formally notifying veterans of examination results; and (3) how reliable and complete the Agent Orange registry was. GAO found that: (1) veterans scheduled for appointments in the summer of 1984 had to wait an average of no more than 30 days at five of the eight medical centers visited; (2) at two of the centers, which did not give examinations within 30 days, delays resulted from the demand created by publicity after the settlement of an Agent Orange lawsuit; (3) at the third center, delays resulted from publicity and a heavy work load; (4) some veterans who had serious health problems were not formally notified of their problems, as required; (5) six of the eight centers visited were sending letters to veterans after their examinations most of the time; (6) one center sent letters only to veterans who did not return to discuss their laboratory test results with the physician; (7) only two centers that sent letters explained both examination and laboratory test results; (8) the computerized registry that records veterans’ symptoms is not reliable because only a restricted number of codes can be used to identify complaints; and (9) as of June 1985, about 47,600 of the over 199,400 examinations medical facilities reported had not been entered in the registry, limiting its usefulness.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Bibliogov
Country
United States
Date
23 July 2013
Pages
74
ISBN
9781289242541