VA to Add 3 Cancers to Presumptive List

VA to Add 3 Cancers to Presumptive List
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This article by Leo Shane III originally appeared on Military Times, the nation's largest independent newsroom dedicated to covering the military and veteran community.

 

Veterans Affairs officials will add male breast cancer, urethral cancer and cancer of the paraurethral glands to the list of illnesses presumed connected to military service in conflicts since 1990, speeding up disability benefits for individuals suffering from the conditions.

 

The move is the latest in a series of cancers and respiratory conditions added to the department’s list of presumptive illnesses in recent years as part of the PACT Act, sweeping veterans legislation passed two summers ago which has impacted millions of veterans nationwide.

 

In a statement, VA Secretary Denis McDonough said the decision to add the three illnesses are part of a broader push to “provide health care and benefits to as many toxic-exposed veterans as possible” and as fast as possible.

 

[FROM VA.GOV: Presumptive Cancers Related to Burn Pit Exposure]

 

Department officials did not say how many individuals may benefit from the new announcement.

 

The policy change covers veterans who served in the Gulf War or who deployed to Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia, Djibouti, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, and Uzbekistan after 2001. Veterans who served in other locations in southwest Asia may also be eligible.

 

Presumptive status allows veterans applying for benefits to skip paperwork establishing their condition as a result of military service. That can cut months of wait times off the benefits process.

 

Veterans whose claims are approved may also be eligible for benefits dating back to August 2022, when the PACT Act was signed into law. Department officials said they will review all claims of veterans suffering from the three cancers, as well as survivors, from the last two years and automatically grant financial payouts if possible.

 

[RELATED: Don’t Miss a Critical Deadline to Complete Your PACT Act Claim]

 

Individuals who have not previously filed for the illnesses can start a new claim through the VA website.

 

The department last month granted its 1 millionth claim related to the PACT Act and has paid out more than $5.7 billion to veterans over that time frame.

 

Other articles by Military Times:

 

Maine shooting reveals mental health care gaps for reservists

 

Are these former officers about to change the Navy shaving game?

 

VA home loan program added $4 trillion to US economy since WWII

 

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