S-702-119
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 287.
Sponsored by John Cornyn (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to contract with an independent outside organization to conduct a study comparing the quality of mental health and addiction therapy care provided by VA health care providers versus non-VA providers. The study would examine multiple care settings — including telehealth, inpatient, outpatient, intensive outpatient, and residential treatment — across seven specific quality measures such as health outcomes, use of evidence-based practices, care coordination, and wait times. The independent organization would be required to submit its findings to the Senate and House Veterans' Affairs Committees and publish the results publicly within 18 months of the agreement being signed.
Who benefits
Veterans currently receiving or seeking mental health and addiction treatment from the VA or community care providers, who would gain publicly available data on comparative care quality. Veterans' advocacy organizations and researchers who would gain an independent evidence base for future policy recommendations. Non-VA community care providers who perform well could see increased referrals if the study highlights their strengths. Congress and VA policymakers who would receive structured, independent data to inform future program decisions. Taxpayers broadly, if the study leads to more efficient allocation of VA health care resources.
Who is hurt
VA health care providers and the Department itself could face reputational or budgetary consequences if the study reveals performance gaps. Non-VA community providers who perform poorly relative to VA providers could face reduced referrals or contract scrutiny. Veterans who might delay seeking care while awaiting study results, if the study's existence creates uncertainty about which system to use. The independent organization contracted to conduct the study would bear the administrative burden of meeting the bill's detailed requirements within a fixed timeline.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that veterans deserve transparent, evidence-based information about the quality of care they receive, and that no comprehensive independent comparison of VA versus non-VA mental health and addiction care currently exists. They contend that with veteran suicide rates remaining persistently elevated — the VA's own data shows approximately 17 veteran suicides per day — understanding which care settings and providers produce better outcomes is essential to directing resources effectively. The bill's bipartisan sponsorship across eight senators from both parties reflects broad agreement that data-driven accountability is a necessary first step toward improving veteran mental health outcomes.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that commissioning another study delays concrete action on a well-documented crisis, and that existing VA and academic research already provides substantial evidence about gaps in veteran mental health care. They contend that the bill's 18-month study timeline and lack of any required follow-up action or funding mechanism means findings could be shelved without producing policy change, making it a low-cost substitute for more direct legislative intervention. Critics may also note that the bill does not appropriate funds for the study, leaving its scope and independence dependent on whatever agreement the Secretary negotiates — potentially limiting the rigor of the final product.