U.S. to Ease Rules on Benefits for Vets with Stress Disorder

Veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder may have an easier time getting disability benefits as soon as this Monday. The Department of Veterans Affairs is set to drop a rule that requires veterans to document specific events like mortar attacks or bomb blasts that might have caused the illness, The New York Times reports.

The new rules allow the department to give benefits to veterans who claim to be suffering from PTSD and can prove they served in war zone in a job that exposed them to traumatic events. It will also allow the VA to grant compensation to veterans who live in fear of traumatic events, even if they did not experience them.

The changes address longstanding complaints that finding records of specific events sometimes proved impossible, and that benefits were not available to women, who are not allowed in combat yet can still experience trauma.

“This nation has a solemn obligation to the men and women who have honorably served this country and suffer from the emotional and often devastating hidden wounds of war,” Secretary of  Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki told The New York Times. “This final regulation goes a long way to ensure that veterans receive the benefits and services they need.”

But the changes are attracting criticism because of the estimated cost–as much as $5 billion over several years. And some metal health experts fear that young veterans with treatable conditions may become financially dependent on their benefits. Others fear the new rules will encourage fraudulent claims.

But the changes mandate that VA psychiatrists or psychologists will make the final determination on PTSD cases.

Some estimates say that 20 percent of the more than 2 million service members who have been deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan since 2001 will develop PTSD.

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