Title 38 › Part V— BOARDS, ADMINISTRATIONS, AND SERVICES › Chapter 73— VETERANS HEALTH ADMINISTRATION—ORGANIZATION AND FUNCTIONS › Subchapter II— GENERAL AUTHORITY AND ADMINISTRATION › § 7325
Creates four medical emergency preparedness centers at VA medical centers. Each center must be run by VA employees. The Under Secretary for Health must supervise and check how the centers are working, and must work with the Assistant Secretary in charge of operations, preparedness, security, and law enforcement. The centers must research ways to detect, diagnose, prevent, and treat injuries and illnesses from chemical, biological, radiological, incendiary, or explosive threats. They must train and advise health workers (including those outside the VA) and, in a disaster or emergency, give lab, disease-tracking, medical, or other help to federal, state, and local health agencies. The Secretary must pick sites by competition, spread them across the country, and can allow more than one medical center to team up. Chosen sites must have links with a medical school, a public health school, and a graduate epidemiology program for training, plus programs for nurses, social workers, counselors, and allied health staff, and the ability to attract leading scientists. A qualifying medical school or public health school is an accredited school that teaches toxicology and environmental health and is affiliated with the VA center. Centers may seek research funding, must share their findings and training materials with health providers and other federal agencies (including DoD and HHS), may help civil or criminal investigations, and may request temporary experts from other agencies. Center money must be budgeted separately from VA medical care. The law authorized $20,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2003 through 2007.
Full Legal Text
Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 7325
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60