David Shulkin (center), the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs undersecretary of health, talks with attendees in July prior to testifying at a Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee hearing in Gilbert, Ariz. Donald Trump has selected Shulkin to lead the agency. Ross D. Franklin/AP hide caption
Veterans Affairs
Wednesday
Wednesday
David Shulkin, the undersecretary for health at the Department of Veterans Affairs, leaves a meeting with President-elect Donald Trump at Trump Tower in New York on Monday. Evan Vucci/AP hide caption
Wednesday
Coning left the Marines in 2013. His wife says she thinks it's likely he had post-traumatic stress disorder, but he was never tested for it by the VA. Courtesy of the Coning family hide caption
After A Vet's Suicide, Getting VA Benefits Can Compound A Family's Grief
Wednesday
Stacy Bannerman testifies before the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Military Quality of Life and Veterans Affairs in 2006. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc./Getty Images hide caption
Tuesday
Sue McConnell is one of more than 130 transgender veterans receiving treatment at the Tucson Veterans Affairs hospital. Jimmy Jenkins/KJZZ hide caption
Thursday
ReWalk Robotics service engineer Tom Coulter (right) looks on as paralyzed Army veteran Gene Laureano walks using a ReWalk device on Wednesday in the Bronx, N.Y. Mel Evans/AP hide caption
Tuesday
Daniel Harmon, a veteran of the wars in both Afghanistan and Iraq, looks out the window of his room at the Hollywood Veterans Center in Los Angeles. The facility provides housing to homeless vets. David Gilkey/NPR hide caption
The U.S. Declared War On Veteran Homelessness — And It Actually Could Win
Thursday
Alan Oates was exposed to herbicides, such as Agent Orange, while serving in Vietnam in 1968. Decades after returning home, he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, and because Congress passed the Agent Orange Act, he's able to receive VA benefits. Courtesy of Alan Oates hide caption
Can The Agent Orange Act Help Veterans Exposed To Mustard Gas?
Wednesday
Veterans Choice Act Fails To Ease Travel Burdens For Vets In Need Of Care
Lakeshore Public Media
Veterans Choice Act Fails To Ease Travel Burdens For Vets In Need Of Care
Thursday
A U.S. Air Force C-123 sprays herbicides on dense jungle beside a South Vietnamese highway on May 18, 1966. This aircraft is the last in a formation of three. Spray from the other two planes can be seen ahead. U.S. Air Force via AP hide caption
Air Force Reservists Say Agent Orange Residue Damaged Their Health
Thursday
The ferry pulls in to Friday Harbor, the only incorporated city in San Juan County, Wash. Veterans will often travel the hourlong ferry ride to reach VA services here. Patricia Murphy/KUOW hide caption
In Remote Washington, Veterans Services Are Ferry Ride Away
Wednesday
Grant County Veterans Service Officer Bob Kelley (right) works with World War II Army veteran Frederick Kern at the Grant County Government Building in Marion, Ind., on Monday. Aaron P. Bernstein for NPR hide caption
Without Help, Navigating Benefits Can Be Overwhelming For Veterans
Lakeshore Public Media
Without Help, Navigating Benefits Can Be Overwhelming For Veterans
Tuesday
George Murray, who served in Vietnam, was able to access his medical benefits from the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs relatively easily while living in Boston. But veterans living in other parts of Massachusetts, like Cape Cod, have more difficulty. Across the U.S., VA data show the unevenness in its benefit spending. Jesse Costa/WBUR hide caption
Wednesday
The House easily approved a deal to help veterans hammered out by Florida GOP Rep. Jeff Miller (left) and independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont J. Scott Applewhite/AP hide caption
Monday
House Veterans' Affairs Committee Chairman Jeff Miller, a Florida Republican. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images hide caption