The Veterans of Foreign Wars, one of the largest veteran service organizations in the country and one that represents many elderly veterans, said they are very concerned about the study and have many questions regarding the plan behind it and how it was rolled out.

Terrance Hayes, the VFW’s director of communications, met with the VA leadership twice this week and said that he’s received few answers and heard little about it.

“It feels like they’ve talked about everything but [the study],” he said.

It is not just advocacy groups that are upset that veterans were used in a study for a drug that only had anecdotal support within the medical community, which Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has warned could be a false hope.

Rep. Mark Takano, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee., said while the results may be preliminary, he found the data released by the VA to be concerning and showed that it “may be premature to treat veterans” with the drug, “particularly in light of NIH recommending these drugs not be used.”

“I’m not convinced we’re ready for widespread off-label use of hydroxychloroquine at VA — especially when the administration hasn’t done enough research on its safety and efficacy for treating COVID-19,” he added. “When it comes to treating our veterans, we must rely on expert opinion and the proven science that leads to consistent guidance across the country.”

Rep. Ruben Gallego, a Democratic member of Takano’s committee and an Iraq War veteran from Arizona, went further, saying he was outraged that the VA appeared to turn veterans into experimental subjects to support an unproven treatment touted by the president.

“I think the most important thing is we need to keep veterans safe, not necessarily being test labs for the president to score political points,” Gallego said.

As the pandemic has spread across the United States, veteran service organizations, or VSOs, have said numerous times that the country’s second largest government agency charged with caring for the nation’s veteran population has remained tightlipped regarding its response to the spread of the coronavirus.

Many say they are concerned about reports that some veteran hospitals across the country have run short on PPE, despite the VA continuing to say that it has enough in stock.

The lack of specificity and media availability by department leadership has some concerned.

“The largest health care provider in the country and the backstop for the civilian health care system isn’t out front being heard from and having questions asked of it on a daily basis?” Butler said. “From the basic standpoint of a democratic society facing one of the largest health crises in a century, that seems incorrect and inappropriate.”