Title 38 › Part PART V— - BOARDS, ADMINISTRATIONS, AND SERVICES › Chapter CHAPTER 73— - VETERANS HEALTH ADMINISTRATION—ORGANIZATION AND FUNCTIONS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - GENERAL AUTHORITY AND ADMINISTRATION › § 7315
The Secretary must set up a Geriatrics and Gerontology Advisory Committee inside the Veterans Health Administration. The Secretary will pick members after the Under Secretary for Health recommends them. Members must include people who are not federal employees and who know about aging research, education, or clinical care, and at least one representative of a national veterans service organization. The Secretary will invite other federal departments and agencies to join in the Committee’s work and must give the Committee the staff and help it needs. The Committee must advise the Under Secretary for Health on geriatrics and gerontology. It must evaluate the geriatric centers, including a site visit no later than 3 years after any new center opens and no later than 2 years after the last review for centers that were operating on August 26, 1980. The Committee must also check whether the Department can provide high-quality geriatric, extended-care, and other health services, look at current and future needs of older veterans and the Department’s plans, and do other tasks the Secretary or Under Secretary assign. The Committee will send reports through the Under Secretary to the Secretary describing center operations, quality, whether veterans’ needs are being met, problems and fixes, and needed services. The Committee will send the same report to the appropriate Congressional committees, and the Secretary must send Congress any comments or recommendations within 90 days after receiving the Committee’s report.
Full Legal Text
Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 7315
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73