Switch Theme:

The Phoenix VA's secret list  [RSS] Share on facebook Share on Twitter Submit to Reddit
»
Author Message
Advert


Forum adverts like this one are shown to any user who is not logged in. Join us by filling out a tiny 3 field form and you will get your own, free, dakka user account which gives a good range of benefits to you:
  • No adverts like this in the forums anymore.
  • Times and dates in your local timezone.
  • Full tracking of what you have read so you can skip to your first unread post, easily see what has changed since you last logged in, and easily see what is new at a glance.
  • Email notifications for threads you want to watch closely.
  • Being a part of the oldest wargaming community on the net.
If you are already a member then feel free to login now.




Made in us
5th God of Chaos! (Ho-hum)





Curb stomping in the Eye of Terror!

The President signed the VA bill...
http://thehill.com/policy/defense/214598-obama-signs-va-reform-bill-into-law
President Obama on Thursday signed a $16.3 billion bill to overhaul the troubled Veterans Affairs Department, saying the country had a “sacred duty” to protect its military service members.

The bill, approved by Congress last week, would allow veterans to seek private care outside VA facilities, and would also provide money for the VA to hire more doctors and nurses. The effort came after reports that some veterans had waited months to get care from the VA.

“As a country, we have a sacred obligation to serve you as well as you served us,” Obama told an audience of military service members, veterans and their family members at Fort Belvoir in Virginia. “We are going to spend each and every day working to do right by you and your families.”
Veterans Affairs chief Robert McDonald attended the ceremony, along with House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.), Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chairman Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Michael Michaud (Maine), the top Democrat on the House Veterans' Affairs panel. Reps. Pete Gallego (D-Texas.) and Raul Ruiz (D-Calif.) were also present.

GOP Reps. Jeff Denham (Calif.) and Rep. Jackie Walorski (Ind.), who are both members of the House Veterans' Affairs panel, also attended the ceremony. House Veterans' Affairs Chairman Jeff Miller (R-Fla.), however, was not at the ceremony. He was visiting a Veterans Affairs facility in El Paso, Texas.

Waits at Veterans Affairs hospitals became a full-fledged national scandal this spring, as an inspector general report found patients seeking care from a Phoenix VA hospital had waited an average of 115 days for an initial doctor’s appointment. Official data claimed the wait time was only 24 days. The investigation also showed 1,700 veterans had been intentionally kept off official patient rolls.

Those findings led VA Secretary Eric Shinseki to resign in May.

The new law would grant the VA secretary additional powers to fire incompetent managers, something Obama noted in his comments.

“If you engage in an unethical practice, cover up a serious problem, you should be fired,” Obama said.

Obama also said the measure “will not and can not be the end of our effort.”

The new law provides $10 billion for veterans to seek medical care at non-VA providers if they live more than 40 miles from an agency facility, or if they do not get a doctor’s appointment within 30 days.

But it is unclear how long that funding will actually last and when the VA will need to go back to Congress for additional money.

In a statement, Miller said the legislation should serve as a “wakeup call” for the president.

“I sincerely hope the president views this event as more than just a photo-op or speaking engagement,” said Miller, who called on Obama to become “personally involved in solving VA’s many problems.”

During the ceremony, Obama also made his first public comments about the killing of Major Harold Greene, who was shot in Afghanistan on Tuesday. Greene is the highest-ranking military officer to die in that war.

“Our prayers are with the Greene family, as they are with all the gold star families and those who've sacrificed so much for our nation," Obama said. "Now, four months from now, our combat mission to Afghanistan will be complete."


I hope they clean house from this point forward...

This won't be a quick fix, so we must remain vigilant.

Live Ork, Be Ork. or D'Ork!


 
   
Made in us
Decrepit Dakkanaut





I really have to wonder what exactly "allows veterans to seek private care outside of VA clinics" would entail...

This sort of seems a bit of a nebulous thing, like the ACA.
   
Made in us
Decrepit Dakkanaut






Leerstetten, Germany

 Ensis Ferrae wrote:
I really have to wonder what exactly "allows veterans to seek private care outside of VA clinics" would entail...

This sort of seems a bit of a nebulous thing, like the ACA.


Without reading the actual wording in the bill (if it even clarifies it at all) I would imagine it is something like "if no appointment is available within X days the facility has to authorize and pay for care at a private physician". We do similar things for other outside services (specialized treatment, scans, patient needs to be in a hospital and the hospital is full).

My only small concern about treatment with outside physicians is our fancy computerized records. It actually does a great job at keeping track of everything that was ever done or prescribed and makes it easy to keep track of care. So outside visits would have to be scanned in and they wouldn't have access to years of history about the patient. But if that lack of access becomes a problem then they should work on a fix for that instead of using that as an excuse not to have people be seen.
   
Made in us
5th God of Chaos! (Ho-hum)





Curb stomping in the Eye of Terror!

Dude?!?!

Every thing is a PR political thing to them...



E-mails: VA secretary sought changes in Phoenix report

A top Department of Veterans Affairs official and a White House appointee successfully pressed for changes in an inspector general's report on the Phoenix VA medical center.

According to newly released documents, the report was amended to add a finding that there was no conclusive evidence that delays in care resulted in veteran deaths.

In recent congressional testimony, acting VA Inspector General Richard Griffin adamantly denied that changes in the final report, which downplayed links between delayed care and up to 40 veteran deaths, had been "dictated" by VA headquarters.

But e-mails released Friday by the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs show that Sloan Gibson, who had been acting VA secretary, personally corresponded with Griffin in early August, asking him to amend the report.

Specifically, Gibson asked the inspector general to add findings about a Phoenix whistle-blower's claim that up to 40 veterans died awaiting care.

E-mails show White House deputy chief of staff Rob Nabors, appointed by President Barack Obama this summer to monitor the VA scandal, also urged the change. The e-mails also asked the OIG to share its planned "message" to the media about veterans' deaths.

Once the report was revised to include new language, records show,Assistant Inspector General John Daigh sent an e-mail to a VA administrator, asking, "Was the message on the deaths well received by leadership?"

Later, Gibson sent a note to Griffin, whom he addressed as "Griff."

"Thanks on all counts!" for changes in the Phoenix report, he wrote. "I appreciate the focus on the 40 deaths ..."

Robert McDonald was confirmed as the new VA secretary in July; Gibson returned to his post as deputy secretary.

On Friday, VA officials released a statement saying the agency had no role in deciding what would be in the final report.

"VA does not and cannot dictate the final content of any reports to the independent entity that authors them," the statement said.

Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., chairman of the House committee, sent a letter to the president this week asking Obama to expeditiously replace Griffin with a permanent inspector general. The position has been vacant since George Opfer retired Dec. 31.

"In the midst of the largest and most damaging scandal in VA's history," Miller wrote, "it is vitally important that VA Office of Inspector General have an independent and objective leader in place to combat waste, fraud and abuse."

In a separate letter to Griffin, Miller asked that his oversight committee be provided all drafts and other versions of investigations in the future.

OIG spokeswoman Joanne Moffett said correspondence about the Phoenix report does not reflect "dubious motives" or indicate Gibson was trying to improperly influence the OIG.

Instead, she said, it shows he was trying to ensure a thorough report. Moffett noted that inspector-general probes over the past decade repeatedly exposed scheduling fraud, yet VA administrators failed to correct the problem.

As an agency leader, Gibson moved "to address wait-time issues once and for all," she said.

The language with regard to 40 deaths was inserted because media had widely reported on alleged fatalities, she said, and the topic needed to be addressed publicly. It was "not at the request of VA," she added, but based on internal deliberations among OIG staffers.

With regard to Miller's letters, Moffett said VA officials could not respond because they had not seen them Friday.

The Aug. 26 OIG report confirmed that Phoenix VA Health Care System systematically falsified appointment records and provided untimely care to thousands of patients, some of whom suffered adverse affects.

With regard to allegations that 40 veterans had died, however, the report said inspectors "were unable to conclusively assert that the absence of timely quality care caused the deaths of these veterans."

In subsequent press interviews, Gibson recited that phrase as a vindication for the VA; some media reported that the finding debunked allegations by the Phoenix whistle-blower, Dr. Sam Foote.

Foote never asserted that patients had died "because" of untimely treatment. He said they died while awaiting care in a dishonest system, and he asked the inspector general to investigate a potential linkage.

No previous OIG report has ever listed untimely care as the cause of a death, and medical experts say that would be an impossibility: Death is caused by a disease or injury, and delayed care could only be a contributing factor.

Foote testified that the OIG finding was a "whitewash" and a retaliatory smear that would discourage other potential whistle-blowers. Members of Congress also expressed skepticism about the finding, and grilled VA officials during hearings.

In testimony before the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs, Griffin repeatedly was asked if his office was pressed to revise the Phoenix report by VA headquarters. He acknowledged some "minor things" were changed as a result of consultation, but insisted no revisions were "dictated" by VA administrators.


I know I ramble on about F&F, ghazi and the IRS ordea... but, this?

Heads need to fething roll for this. It's an absolute disgrace.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2014/11/04 03:12:51


Live Ork, Be Ork. or D'Ork!


 
   
 
Forum Index » Off-Topic Forum
Go to: