
The Fiscal Year 2027 National Defense Appropriations Act advances several significant provisions for service members living with traumatic brain injury, moving through both chambers of Congress with bipartisan momentum this June.
The Senate Armed Services Committee approved S. 4784 on June 10 after a three-day markup. The bill includes a provision “requiring the Secretary of Defense to provide a briefing on the feasibility of regular cognitive testing and establishing blast overpressure and TBI logs, and encouraging DoD to approach brain health, blast overpressure exposure tracking, and suicide risk analysis as force health protection.” Additionally, it includes “the provision of training to the armed forces of partner nations in the Indo-Pacific and Arctic regions in the following areas: (A) Health effects and medical response related to chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, and explosive weapons, (B) Trauma care, (C) Preventive medicine and infectious disease, (D) Post-traumatic stress disorder, (E) Suicide prevention, (F) Traumatic brain injury, (G) Medical and health intelligence, (H) Health policy and administration.”
The House version, H.R. 8800, passed committee 44-12 and includes a section that would create a working group to develop an AI-driven digital strategy for treating brain injuries, and $7.5 million for a Cognitive Performance Enhancement Program for Special Operations Forces. H.R. 8800 has not yet received a floor vote.










