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 › § 7329
The Secretary must pick at least six VA health-care facilities to be Parkinson’s Disease research, education, and clinical centers. The Under Secretary for Health recommends the sites. The centers will be set up and run if money is available. The Secretary must spread the centers around the country. Any VA facility that already ran a Parkinson’s center on January 1, 2005 should be kept as a center unless it fails to meet the standards or has not shown it can do the job now or soon. A special review panel of experts in neurodegenerative diseases will rate proposals and pick the best ones. Panel members serve up to two years (half of the first members serve three years and half serve two years). A facility can only be picked if the panel rates its proposal highly and the Under Secretary finds it has or can develop certain things: a neurology training link with an accredited medical school, strong researchers, a veterans-and-staff advisory committee, ways to evaluate the center, the ability to coordinate nationally, to help other VA sites through a consortium, and to build a national data collection for care of neurodegenerative diseases. The law lets money be provided as needed and requires that existing 2005 centers get enough funding before new centers at other sites get funds. Research at these centers can compete for VA research money and gets priority for Parkinson’s and movement disorder projects. The panel is not covered by chapter 10 of title 5.
Full Legal Text
Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 7329
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73