IG: Phoenix VA Hospital Missed Care for 1,700 Vets
About 1,700 veterans in need of care were "at risk of being lost or
forgotten" after being kept off the official wait list at the troubled
Phoenix veterans hospital, the Veterans Affairs watchdog said Wednesday
in a scathing report that increases pressure on VA Secretary Eric
Shinseki to resign.
The investigation, initially focused on the Phoenix hospital, found
systemic problems at the VA's sprawling system that provides medical
care to about 6.5 million veterans each year. The interim report
confirmed allegations of excessive waiting time for care in Phoenix,
with an average 115-day wait for a first appointment for those on the
wait list.
"While our work is not complete, we have substantiated that significant
delays in access to care negatively impacted the quality of care at this
medical facility," Richard J. Griffin, the department's acting
inspector general, wrote in the 35-page report. The report found that
"inappropriate scheduling practices are systemic throughout" the
nationwide VA health care system.
Colorado Sen. Mark Udall on Wednesday became the first Democratic
senator to call for Shinseki to leave. "We need new leadership who will
demand accountability to fix these problems," Udall said in a statement.
Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., chairman of the House Veterans Affairs
Committee, Rep. Howard "Buck" McKeon, R-Calif., chairman of the House
Armed Services Committee, and Arizona's two Republican senators, John
McCain and Jeff Flake, also called for Shinseki to step down. Miller
also said Attorney General Eric Holder should launch a criminal
investigation into the VA.
Miller said the report confirmed that "wait time schemes and data
manipulation are systemic throughout VA and are putting veterans at risk
in Phoenix and across the country."
Shinseki called the IG's findings "reprehensible to me, to this
department and to veterans." He said he was directing the Phoenix VA to
immediately address each of the 1,700 veterans waiting for appointments.
Griffin said his office has increased the number of VA health care
facilities it is investigating to 42 nationwide, up from 26 known to be
under investigation as of last week. He said investigators' next steps
include determining whether names of veterans awaiting care were
purposely omitted from electronic waiting lists and at whose direction
and whether any deaths were related to delays in care.
He said investigators at some of the other 42 facilities "have
identified instances of manipulation of VA data that distort the
legitimacy of reported waiting times."
Justice Department officials have already been brought into cases where
there is evidence of a criminal or civil violation, Griffin said.
Dr. Samuel Foote, a former clinic director for the VA in Phoenix who was
the first to bring the allegations to light, said the findings were no
surprise.
"I knew about all of this all along," Foote told The Associated Press in
an interview. "The only thing I can say is you can't celebrate the fact
that vets were being denied care."
Foote took issue with the finding by the inspector general that patients
had, on average, waited 115 days for their first medical appointment.
"I don't think that number is correct. It was much longer," he said. "It seemed to us to be about six months."
Still, Foote said it is good that the VA finally appears to be addressing some long-standing problems.
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