My guest is University of Miami President Donna Shalala, who explains the educational benefits offered by the new Post-9/11 GI Bill to military veterans and service members.
“You Served. Get Benefits.”
That’s the message of a new nationwide campaign kicked off last week by the Veterans Administration to help veterans and service members applying for the Post-9/11 GI Bill. When launching the campaign, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric Shinseki stated, “We won’t rest until all student veterans have received the education benefit they earned in defense of our nation.” >>>>>
VA Halts Access To EHR System
The administration is addressing a bug that caused its VistAWeb e-health records system to return incomplete data.
The Department of Veterans Affairs shut down its electronic health record system last week to fix a problem affecting access to patient data.
A source familiar with the situation said Tuesday that the administration is working out a bug in the system and wants to be sure it's fixed before putting it back online.
At this time, the VA does not know when that will be, the source said.
According to a patient safety alert sent out by the VA Central Office March 3, a clinician discovered incorrect prescription information for a patient in VA computerized patient record system, and alerted the Department to problems in the system. >>>>>
Lawmakers push for big VA budget increase
Despite plans to give the Veterans Affairs Department a 7 percent budget increase at a time when most federal spending is frozen, key congressional committees are pushing for even bigger veterans budgets.
They just can’t agree on how much more to give.
At the low end, Democrats on the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee are recommending a $380 million increase in the $56.9 billion VA budget proposed by the Obama administration. At the high end, Republicans on the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee are recommending a $2.6 billion increase. Democrats on the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee fall in between, proposing a $571 million increase over the administration budget.
Republicans on the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee have not yet released their recommendations on the 2011 budget. >>>>>














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