HR-439-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Health.
Sponsored by Nick LaLota (R-NY)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to provide hospital care and medical services to veterans living outside the United States who have a permanent and total service-connected disability rating. The VA would be required to cover care abroad if it determines the treatment meets U.S. standard medical practice and any prescribed medications are FDA-approved. The bill would also require the VA to support direct-deposit reimbursements and update its mobile applications to allow digital form submission, real-time tracking, and access to key documents such as benefits authorization letters.
Who benefits
Veterans with permanent and total service-connected disability ratings who live or travel outside the United States — a population that includes retirees living abroad, veterans married to foreign nationals, and those who relocated for lower cost of living. Foreign medical providers who treat these veterans and would gain access to direct-deposit reimbursement. Veterans' family members abroad who may benefit from improved financial stability when a veteran can access care locally rather than traveling to the U.S. Technology and app developers contracted by the VA to build or update digital tools.
Who is hurt
U.S.-based VA medical facilities and providers who may see reduced patient volume if veterans abroad no longer need to return stateside for care. Domestic healthcare workers in VA-adjacent roles who could face reduced demand. U.S. taxpayers who would bear the cost of expanded coverage, including reimbursements to foreign providers. Veterans without a permanent and total disability rating who live abroad and remain ineligible, potentially perceiving the expansion as inequitable. VA administrative staff who would face implementation burdens from new digital infrastructure requirements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that veterans who earned a permanent and total disability rating through their service should not be denied VA care simply because they choose or need to live abroad — a restriction that penalizes veterans for their place of residence rather than their service record. They contend that requiring these veterans to travel to the United States for routine care imposes significant financial and physical hardship, particularly on those with severe disabilities, and that modernizing reimbursement and digital tools would reduce administrative delays that currently discourage eligible veterans from seeking care.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that extending VA coverage to foreign medical providers introduces significant oversight challenges, as the VA has limited ability to verify the quality, billing accuracy, or fraud risk of providers operating outside U.S. jurisdiction. They contend that the requirement to meet "U.S. standard medical practice" may be difficult to enforce abroad, potentially exposing the VA to improper payments, and that expanding an already strained VA system to cover an international patient population could divert resources from the larger population of veterans receiving care domestically.