HR-6526-119
Subcommittee Hearings Held
Sponsored by Jennifer Kiggans (R-VA)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to annually survey health care providers in VA-contracted networks to determine which ones accept CHAMPVA assignments — meaning they agree to treat CHAMPVA beneficiaries and accept the program's approved payment rate as full payment. The Secretary would then publish and maintain a publicly available directory of those providers. Starting 180 days after enactment, the VA would also submit annual reports to Congress for five years, broken down by state and VA service region, showing how many network providers accept CHAMPVA, what percentage do not, and which geographic areas have CHAMPVA beneficiaries but no accepting providers nearby.
Who benefits
CHAMPVA beneficiaries — primarily spouses and dependent children of veterans who are permanently and totally disabled due to a service-connected condition, or who died from a service-connected condition — who currently struggle to identify which providers will accept their coverage. Caregivers and family members of eligible veterans who manage health care logistics. Advocacy organizations that assist veterans' families in navigating benefits. Researchers and policymakers who would gain access to geographic access data. Providers who accept CHAMPVA and would gain visibility through the directory.
Who is hurt
VA-contracted network administrators who would bear the administrative burden of conducting annual provider queries and reporting results to the Secretary. Health care providers who do not accept CHAMPVA assignments may face increased scrutiny or pressure once non-participation rates are publicly reported. The VA would incur implementation and ongoing maintenance costs for the directory and annual reporting. Taxpayers would indirectly bear any administrative costs associated with the new requirements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that CHAMPVA beneficiaries — a population that includes the families of the most severely disabled veterans — currently have no reliable way to know in advance whether a provider will accept their coverage, forcing them to make calls, face unexpected bills, or forgo care. They contend that a publicly available, annually updated directory would directly reduce this friction and that the five-year congressional reporting requirement, including identification of geographic gaps, would create accountability and a data foundation for future access improvements.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill addresses a transparency problem without tackling the underlying reason many providers decline CHAMPVA assignments: reimbursement rates that providers consider inadequate relative to Medicare or private insurance. They contend that a directory of providers who do not accept CHAMPVA may simply document access gaps without providing the resources or rate adjustments needed to close them, and that the administrative burden placed on network administrators and the VA could divert resources from direct patient care without meaningfully expanding the provider pool.