Computer system clears VA backlog

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

WASHINGTON — Call it the demise of the old rubber thumb and the rise of the computerized keyword search.

WASHINGTON — Call it the demise of the old rubber thumb and the rise of the computerized keyword search.

The Department of Veterans Affairs is trying to change the way veterans file disability and other claims in hopes of speeding up an antiquated, paper-bound process that seems like a vestige of a different era.

As recently as 2012, VA employees would have to search through veterans’ files, which in some cases were 4 feet high and included everything from X-rays to eye exams to evidence of amputations.

The new system introduces standardized electronic forms for veterans to fill out. The goal is to computerize a lengthy process that VA officials say led to long delays in handling claims and appeals.

In March 2013, at the peak of the problem, there were 611,000 backlogged disability compensation and pensions claims. Today, the backlog is 243,000, a reduction of 60 percent in 18 months.

The department’s definition of a “backlogged” case is one in which a veteran has been waiting for 125 days or longer.

Allison Hickey, VA undersecretary for benefits, said that the department has scanned 1 billion images, or 8.1 million pounds of paperwork, enough to fill 28 massive C-5 Galaxy cargo planes.

She said the backlog was in part due to the mounds of paper that claims adjudicators had to sort through to make decisions.

“Before, we had raters sitting with little rubber fingertips going through the 18 inches of paper in a veteran’s record, searching for one word that indicates their injury in that record. They would spend a really long time trying to find that,” she said.

She said that today, the employees can use a keyword search to find the word. It’s done in seconds. The system is known as the Veterans Benefits Management System (VBMS), and the VA’s army of 29,000 claims processors are able to see the electronic medical records.

The program was launched under a pilot program in 2012 at five regional offices. As of June 2013, the system was rolled out to all 56 VA regional offices. Today, it is used at 148 VA facilities.

There has been some resistance, especially from older veterans who are not as comfortable with the technology. And a majority of veterans still file their claims on paper. But Hickey said there are many training opportunities that veterans groups are offering, and many veterans find the system easier than they expected.

“Sometimes the federal government is known for not always delivering on IT systems in particularly good ways,” Hickey said at a briefing and demo for reporters at the Veterans Benefits Administration’s headquarters in downtown Washington “But I think this is a huge success story.”