Title 38 › Part PART II— - GENERAL BENEFITS › Chapter CHAPTER 17— - HOSPITAL, NURSING HOME, DOMICILIARY, AND MEDICAL CARE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - GENERAL › § 1706
The Secretary must run VA hospital and medical programs so care is cost‑effective and given in the right clinical setting. The VA must keep special programs or facilities to treat disabled veterans (including those with spinal cord problems, traumatic brain injury, blindness, prosthetics and sensory needs, and serious mental illness). The VA cannot let its ability to provide these specialized services fall below what it could do nationwide on October 9, 1996. The Secretary must work with the Advisory Committee on Prosthetics and Special Disabilities Programs and the Committee on Care of Severely Chronically Mentally Ill Veterans. The law says how the VA will measure capacity. For mental health it looks at counts of intensive teams and patients, opioid program and dual‑diagnosis numbers and spending, substance‑use beds and follow‑up and recidivism rates, staff and clinic counts, and total mental health spending. For spinal cord and blind centers it looks at staffed beds and full‑time staff, for prosthetics it looks at annual spending, and for traumatic brain injury it looks at patients treated and spending. Patient outcomes cannot replace the capacity requirement. By April 1 each year the Secretary must report to the House and Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committees using standard data; the Inspector General must audit and certify the report. The Under Secretary for Health must set job standards for managers who allocate these resources, in consultation with the two committees. Each primary care VA facility must have a plan to provide or refer veterans for mental health services.
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Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 1706
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73