Weekly Updates

LegiStorm is constantly adding new information on the people, places and reports in our database. In the past week, LegiStorm added:

  • 53 new people
  • 160 new organizations
  • 350 job history records for people in our database
  • 66 education records for people in our database
  • 96 contact addresses, emails and URLs (LinkedIn, Facebook, etc.)
  • 5 new people through the revolving door
  • 60 new policy reports
  • 28 new trips to our privately funded travel database
  • 97 new personal financial disclosures
  • 49605 new tweets
  • 7567 new press releases
 LegiStorm Blog
 SOCIAL MEDIA

 DEVBLOG
 IN THE NEWS
Few rules when foreign governments fund Congressional travel

by FOX 13 / WTVT-TV on 05/10/2013

Lawmakers' families bring home big perks

by Iowa Watchdog on 05/08/2013

Paying the Bills | Hill Navigator

by Roll Call on 05/07/2013

LegiStorm: Most new lawmakers want D.C. experience

by Planet Washington on 04/29/2013

VA Health Care: Persian Gulf Dependents' Medical Exam Program Ineffectively Carried Out - GAO Report

Date: March 31, 1998
Report No.: HEHS-98-108
Pages: 25
  Download  PDF Download PDF Now
Summary:

After being in operation for more than 1-1/2 years, the Department of Veterans Affairs' (VA) program to provide medical examinations to spouses and children of Persian Gulf veterans has yet to be fully implemented. To inform Persian Gulf veterans and their families about the program, VA launched a national campaign that was supplemented by local efforts at coordinating VA medical centers. GAO could not assess the effectiveness of these efforts because of a lack of information on the potential number of Persian Gulf family members who believe that their illnesses are linked to a family member's service in the Gulf War. Only 872 of the 2,802 requested examinations had been completed as of January 1998. Forty-one percent of applicants either failed to report for appointments, refused examinations, or had not yet answered requests to schedule examinations. Several factors contributed to the low completion rate. Participants face a lengthy and cumbersome scheduling process, and examination sites are not always easily accessible. Moreover, VA is not authorized to reimburse participants for travel, lodging, or lost wages. Although the clinical examinations may not resolve whether illnesses among Persian Gulf family members are related to the illnesses of veterans, the clinical examination approach provides these family members with an opportunity to visit with a physician and to receive a free medical examination. Standardized examinations also give VA a health surveillance tool for cataloging prominent symptoms among Persian Gulf family members.

« Return to search Government Accountability Office reports