Veterans
Affairs (VA) operates the nation’s largest integrated health care system with more
than 1,400 care sites, including hospitals, community clinics, community living
centers, domiciliary, readjustment counseling centers, and various other facilities.
[For additional information on VA health care, visit www.va.gov/health.
Click on a topic below to jump to its section:
Eligibility & Enrollment
Medical Services & Medication
VA Medical Programs
Counseling Services
Vocational Services
Who’s Eligible for VA Health Benefits?
If you served in active military service and were discharged or
released under conditions other than dishonorable, you may qualify for VA health
care benefits.
Note: National Guard members may qualify for VA healthcare benefits if they were
called to active duty (other than for training only) and completed the full period
they were ordered to active duty.
Enrollment
Your Transition Assistance Advisor can help you enroll for VA health benefits by
helping you complete the VA Form 10-10EZ (Application for Health Benefits), which
may be obtained from any VA health care facility or regional benefits office, online
or by calling 1-877-222-VETS (8387). Once enrolled, you can receive
health care at VA health care facilities anywhere in the country.
Who should enroll:
- Veterans with a service-connected disability of 50 percent or more.
- Veterans seeking care for a disability the military determined was incurred
or aggravated in the line of duty, but which VA has not yet rated, within 12 months
of discharge.
- Veterans seeking care for a service-connected disability only.
- Veterans seeking registry examinations (Ionizing Radiation, Agent Orange,
Gulf War/Operation Iraqi Freedom and Depleted Uranium).
During enrollment, each veteran is assigned to a priority group. VA uses priority
groups to balance demand for VA health care enrollment with resources. Changes in
available resources may reduce the number of priority groups VA can enroll. If this
occurs, VA will publicize the changes and notify affected enrollees. You can find
out about these priority groups and how the classification affects payment at the
Veterans Affairs website.
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Medical Services & Medication
VA Health Benefits account for the following medical services:
- Inpatient Care
- Extended Care
- Outpatient Care
- Preventive screening (mammograms, and vaccinations
- Medication
Copays for your care may depend on your priority group classification. VA is also
required to bill your private health insurance providers for medical care, supplies
and prescriptions provided for treatment of veterans’ non-service-connected conditions.
Generally, VA cannot bill Medicare, but can bill Medicare supplemental health insurance
for covered services. VA is not authorized to bill a High Deductible Health Plan
(which is usually linked to a Health Savings Account).
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VA Medical Programs
Veteran Health Registries: Certain veterans can participate in a VA health registry
and receive free medical examinations, including laboratory and other diagnostic
tests deemed necessary by an examining clinician. VA maintains health registries
to provide special health examinations and health-related information.
To participate, contact the Environmental Health (EH) Coordinator at the nearest
VA health care facility or visit www.publichealth.va.gov/exposures, to access the directory
of EH Coordinators.
- Gulf War Registry: This registry is available to veterans who served
on active military duty in Southwest Asia during the Gulf War, which began in 1990
and continues to the present, including Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF). The Gulf
War examination registry was established after the first Gulf War to identify possible
diseases resulting from U.S. military personnel service in certain areas of Southwest
Asia. These diseases were endemic to the area or may have been due to hazardous
exposures, including heavy metals. Furthermore, air pollutants, i.e., carbon monoxide
sulfur oxides, hydrocarbons, particulate matter, and nitrogen oxides, singly or
in combination, could have caused chronic health problems.
- Depleted Uranium Registries: Veterans who are identified by the
Department of Defense (DoD) or have concerns about possible depleted uranium (DU)
exposure are eligible for a DU evaluation. Depleted uranium is natural uranium left
over after most of the U-235 isotope has been removed, such as that used as fuel
in nuclear power plants. DU possesses about 60 percent of the radioactivity of natural
uranium; it is a radiation hazard primarily if internalized, such as in shrapnel,
contaminated wounds, and inhalation. In addition to its radioactivity, DU has some
chemical toxicity related to being a heavy metal (similar to lead).
Note: VA maintains two registries for veterans possibly exposed to depleted
uranium. The first is for veterans who served in the Gulf War, including Operation
Iraqi Freedom. The second is for veterans who served elsewhere, including Bosnia
and Afghanistan.
- Agent Orange Registry: This registry is available for veterans
possibly exposed to dioxin or other toxic substances in herbicides used during the
Vietnam War, between 1962 and 1975, regardless of length of service, or while serving
in Korea in 1968 or 1969, or as a result of testing, transporting, or spraying herbicides
for military purposes. DoD has provided a list of locations and dates where herbicides,
including Agent Orange, were used. This DoD list is available at www.publichealth.va.gov/exposures. For those sites not listed,
the Vietnam Veteran should provide some proof of exposure to obtain a registry examination.
- Ionizing Radiation Registry: For Veterans possibly exposed to and
who are concerned about possible adverse effects of their atomic exposure during
the following activities -- On-site participation in an atmospheric detonation of
a nuclear device, whether or not the testing nation was the United States; occupation
of Hiroshima or Nagasaki from Aug. 6, 1945, through July 1, 1946; or internment
as a POW in Japan during World War II, which the Secretary of Veterans Affairs determines
resulted in an opportunity for exposure to ionizing radiation comparable to that
of Veterans involved in the occupation of Hiroshima or Nagasaki.
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Counseling Services
VA provides outreach and readjustment counseling services through 232 community-based
Vet Centers located in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico,
American Samoa, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Veterans are eligible if they served on active duty in a combat theater during World
War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, or the campaigns in Lebanon,
Grenada, Panama, Somalia, Bosnia, Kosovo, Afghanistan, Iraq and the Global War on
Terror. Veterans, who served in the active military during the Vietnam-era,
but not in the Republic of Vietnam, must have requested services at a Vet Center
before Jan. 1, 2004. Vet Centers don’t require enrollment in the VHA
Health Care System.
Vet Center counselors provide:
- Individual, group, and family readjustment counseling to combat veterans
to help them make a successful transition from military to civilian life
- Counseling services for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and help with
any other military related problems that affect functioning within the family, work,
school or other areas of everyday life
- Outreach, education, medical referral, homeless veteran services, employment,
VA benefit referral, and the brokering of non-VA services
- Military sexual trauma counseling to Veterans of both genders and of any
era of military service
Bereavement counseling is also available through Department of
Veterans Affairs (VA’s) Vet Centers to all immediate family members (including spouses,
children, parents, and siblings) of Service members who die in the line of duty
while on active service. This includes federally-activated members of the National
Guard and reserve components.
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Vocational Services
VA provides vocational assistance and therapeutic work opportunities through several
programs for veterans receiving VA health care. Each program offers treatment and
rehabilitation services to help veterans live and work in their communities.
- Incentive Therapy (IT) provides a diversified work experience at
VA medical centers for Veterans who exhibit severe mental illness and/or physical
impairments. IT services may consist of full or part time work with nominal remuneration
limited to the maximum of one half of the Federal minimum wage.
- CWT/ Sheltered Workshop (CWT) operates sheltered workshops at approximately
35 VA Medical Centers. CWT sheltered work shop is a pre-employment vocational activity
that provides an opportunity for work hardening and assessment in a simulated work
environment. Participating Veterans are paid on a piece rate basis.
- CWT/Transitional Work (CWT/TW) is vocational assessment program
that operates in VA medical centers and/or local community business and industry.
CWT/TW participants are matched to real life work assignments for a time limited
basis. Veterans are supervised by personnel of the sponsoring site, under the same
job expectations experienced by non-CWT workers. CWT/TW participants are not considered
employees and receive no traditional employee benefits.
- CWT/Supported Employment (CWT/SE) consists of full-time or part-time
competitive employment with extensive clinical supports. The focus of CWT/SE is
to assist Veterans with psychosis and other serious mental illness gain access to
meaningful competitive employment. CWT/SE follow-up support services are generally
phased out after the Veteran is able to maintain employment independently.
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More information about Health Benefits through Veterans Affairs is available
at the Department of Veterans Affairs website. Learn
about the non-health related benefits offered through VA.