VA Secretary Establishes ALS as a Presumptive Compensable Illness
Date: September 23, 2008
Cites Association between Military Service and Later Development of ALS
WASHINGTON - Veterans with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) may receive badly-needed support for themselves and their families
after the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) announced today that ALS will become a presumptively compensable illness for
all veterans with 90 days or more of continuously active service in the military.
“Veterans are developing ALS in rates higher than
the general population, and it was appropriate to take action,” Secretary of Veterans Affairs Dr. James B. Peake said.
Secretary Peake based his decision primarily
on a November 2006 report by the National Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Medicine (IOM) on the association between
active-duty service and ALS.
“We are extremely grateful to Secretary Peake, Congressman Henry Brown and Senator Lindsey Graham for standing
on the side of veterans with ALS across the country,” said Gary Leo, president and CEO of The ALS Association. “Thanks
to their leadership, veterans with ALS will receive the benefits and care they need, when they need them. Thanks to
their efforts, no veteran with ALS will ever be left behind.”
The report, titled Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis in Veterans: Review of the Scientific Literature, analyzed
numerous previous studies on the issue and concluded that “there is limited and suggestive evidence of an association
between military service and later development of ALS.”
“ALS is a disease that progresses rapidly, once it is diagnosed,” the Secretary explained.
“There simply isn’t time to develop the evidence needed to support compensation claims before many veterans become
seriously ill. My decision will make those claims much easier to process, and for them and their families to receive
the compensation they have earned through their service to our nation.”
ALS, also called Lou Gehrig’s disease, is a neuromuscular disease that affects
about 20,000 to 30,000 people of all races and ethnicities in the United States, is often relentlessly progressive, and is almost always fatal.
ALS causes degeneration of nerve cells in the brain
and spinal cord that leads to muscle weakness, muscle atrophy, and spontaneous muscle activity. Currently, the cause
of ALS is unknown, and there is no effective treatment.
The new interim final regulation applies to all applications for benefits received by VA on or
after September 23, 2008, or that are pending
before VA, the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims, or the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
on that date.
VA will work to identify and
contact veterans with ALS, including those whose claims for ALS were previously denied, through direct mailings and other
outreach programs.
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