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House Passes Soldier, Veteran Care Improvements in Wake of Walter Reed Flap

“Supporting our troops does not mean that you simply salute as you send them off to war,” said Kathy Castor, D-Fla. “It also means that they are supported when they come home, their families are respected, and our wounded warriors receive superior health care for their physical injuries and mental scars.” - Alex Wayne, CQ Staff

CASTOR PASSES THIRD BILL TO EXPAND HEALTH CARE FOR AREA VETERANS

In a rare move for a freshman, U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor today passed the rule for the Wounded Warrior Assistance Act of 2007, a bill she amended last week to improve the health care for Tampa Bay area veterans.

The bill is consistent with Castor’s fight for more and greater access to health care for the underserved and veterans in the Tampa Bay area.

It responds to the bureaucratic missteps and challenges with patient treatment at Walter Reed Army Medical Center and other VA patient and health care around the country.

Castor’s amendment, which she pushed through the House Armed Services Committee meeting last week, helps increase the number of resident physicians at veteran’s hospitals to care for wounded service men and women.

Castor has visited with wounded soldiers and caregivers at area hospitals on several occasions, including the VA hospitals James A. Haley VA Medical Center in Tampa, and Bay Pines VA Healthcare System in St. Petersburg. Haley and Bay Pines are both in Castor's Congressional District and they are the busiest VA hospitals in the country. Doctors, patients and their families told Castor about challenges they face when returning from combat and ideas they had for better care for veterans.

While visiting the Haley VA Center, Castor met with Dr. Steven G. Scott, medical director, Tampa Poly-trauma Rehabilitation Center, Department of Veterans Affairs, who indicated that more physician residents at the hospital training in Iraq War injuries and poly-trauma rehabilitation would be an important improvement for the quality of care for returning veterans.

"The Tampa Polytrauma Rehabilitation Center is a recovery center for wounded warriors. We want to look at that as a priority of our government," said Dr. Scott. "I think the average American would feel very good about contributing and supporting it. If they can get more slots it would help us greatly. If we don't train future doctors, how are they going to take care of future injuries? We probably get 200 to 300 applications, a lot of good people that we could have in this program. But there's a disconnect. On one hand we need people and we have people applying, but on the other hand we cannot offer them positions."

Castor's VA proposal complements her first bill introduced, H.R. 1093, the Resident Physician Shortage Reduction Act of 2007, which would increase the number of resident physician training positions for area hospitals, and help to expand care especially for underserved populations in Tampa Bay area hospitals like St. Joseph's Hospital and Tampa General Hospital.

"Unfortunately, the arbitrary and outdated caps on physician training programs do not adjust for population growth, and contribute to a crisis in health care, especially for underserved folks," said Castor. "This shortage is also reflected in the situation at Haley VA, which is located directly across the street from the University of South Florida's College of Medicine."

Castor continued, "Passage of this legislation will aid in getting much needed physician residents into our Veterans Hospitals so our troops receive the best health care. They are entitled to no less."

Residents at the James A. Haley Veterans' Hospital participate in all aspects of general surgery, including surgical endoscopy, vascular surgery, surgical intensive care unit, chest service, and also provide 'call coverage' for the VA during evenings and weekends.