S-3988-119
Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Hearings held.
Sponsored by Jerry Moran (R-KS)
What it does
This bill would amend federal law to require the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to offer annual preventive health evaluations to veterans with spinal cord injuries or disorders who choose to receive them. The evaluations would cover chronic pain, dietary management, prosthetic equipment, and suitability for assistive technologies — including powered exoskeletons, speech-generating devices, and spinal cord neuromodulation devices. The bill would also require the VA to report to Congress every two years on assistive technology use and outcomes, and to factor evaluation rates into performance reviews of VA regional networks.
Who benefits
Veterans with spinal cord injuries or disorders — estimated at roughly 40,000–50,000 enrolled in VA spinal cord injury programs — who would gain structured annual access to specialized care and newer assistive technologies. Veterans in rural or remote areas who could access evaluations via telehealth. Manufacturers of assistive technologies (powered exoskeletons, neuromodulation devices, speech-generating devices) who would gain a formal pathway for their products to be assessed and prescribed within the VA system. VA spinal cord injury specialists and clinicians whose programs would receive increased institutional attention and performance metrics. Veterans service organizations, which would be formally consulted in rulemaking.
Who is hurt
VA budget and administrative staff who would bear implementation costs for new annual evaluations, reporting requirements, and telehealth infrastructure — costs the bill does not explicitly appropriate. VA regional networks (Veterans Integrated Service Networks) whose performance metrics would now include evaluation rates, potentially creating administrative pressure. Assistive technology manufacturers not included in the VA's consultation process could face competitive disadvantage if guidance favors certain product categories. Veterans who do not use the VA system would not benefit, potentially widening the gap between VA-enrolled and non-enrolled veterans with spinal injuries.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that veterans with spinal cord injuries face complex, evolving medical needs — including secondary complications like pressure injuries, autonomic dysfunction, and chronic pain — that require structured, recurring clinical attention rather than episodic care. They contend that emerging technologies such as transcutaneous spinal stimulation have demonstrated functional improvements in clinical studies, yet veterans often lack access because no systematic assessment pathway exists within the VA. By mandating annual evaluations and tying them to performance metrics, the bill would create accountability mechanisms to ensure this population receives consistent, up-to-date care.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates a new mandatory service category without a dedicated appropriation, leaving the VA to absorb costs from existing budgets — potentially diverting resources from other veteran populations. They contend that mandating specific evaluation components and requiring consultation with technology manufacturers risks embedding commercial interests into clinical guidance, and that the VA's existing clinical discretion already allows specialists to prescribe assistive technologies when appropriate. Critics may also argue that biennial congressional reporting requirements add administrative burden without clear evidence that reporting alone improves patient outcomes.