Obama Aims to Streamline Health Care for Injured Vets

President Obama announced a plan Thursday to create a more efficient record system to streamline health care for wounded veterans.

The electronic record would follow a service member in the military and then later in the Veterans Affairs Department's medical system.

There is currently a six-month backlog in disability claims at the VA. Because the two agencies have different medical systems, veterans have complained about bureaucratic hurdles and long waits as they enter the VA system.

More than 1.6 million troops have deployed in support of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Of those, more than 33,000 have been wounded.

Obama made the announcement with Defense Secretary Robert Gates and VA Secretary Eric Shinseki.

The electronic record keeping system will handle military service members' administrative and medical records from the day they enter service and insure that those files are transferred automatically to the Department of Veterans Affairs when they leave active duty.

As the president tackles the larger problem of health care for all Americans, he is proposing massive spending to enable providers to keep patients' records on computer networks, a development that Obama says will cut costs in the longer term and diminish medical errors.

The White House said the program being undertaken by the Pentagon and Veterans Affairs will be "next leap to delivering seamless, high-quality care, and serve as a model for the nation."

Obama has been pushing as well for increased spending for veterans, claiming those who have and are serving in Iraq and Afghanistan are not getting the care they deserve.

The program introduced Thursday will be part of overall Defense Department spending of $47 billion on health care in the next fiscal year, the White House said.

Over the next five years, the White House said, spending for veterans affairs was set to rise by $25 billion.