Title 38 › Part V— BOARDS, ADMINISTRATIONS, AND SERVICES › Chapter 73— VETERANS HEALTH ADMINISTRATION—ORGANIZATION AND FUNCTIONS › Subchapter II— GENERAL AUTHORITY AND ADMINISTRATION › § 7327
The VA must set up several cooperative centers to improve medical care, rehab, research, and training for veterans with complex injuries from combat. Each center must do research on long-term effects, develop better rehab methods, and keep care coordinated from referral through recovery. One center will be picked as the lead center to set research priorities, make sure centers work together, build a shared data system, create training and patient education materials, and share clinical results. The VA may also send certified rehab nurses and blind-rehabilitation specialists to military hospitals to help wounded service members under health‑care sharing agreements. Centers can apply for medical and prosthetics research money. The Under Secretary for Health must spread useful information from the centers across the VA, provide oversight, and evaluate the centers. To be chosen, a facility must meet nine requirements, including being a regional lead for traumatic brain injury; being located at a tertiary care hospital with needed specialty services; having the ability to manage combat-related impairments; being tied to a medical school; having clinical trial experience; and offering amputation care, pain programs, brain-injury rehab, and general rehab. The VA must give each center needed staff and services, such as blind rehab specialists, occupational therapists with blind rehab training, more mental health providers, and more rehab nurses. Congress authorized $7,000,000 for fiscal year 2005 and $8,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2008, and the Under Secretary may also allocate extra research funds to the centers.
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Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 7327
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60