Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Bipartisan claim has caveat

- D.L. Davis

The opioid crisis has devastated communitie­s, claimed lives and become a major campaign issue.

In the Wisconsin U.S. Senate race, Republican challenger Leah Vukmir has slammed U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin, a Democrat, over an overprescr­iption scandal at the Tomah Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

In response, Baldwin launched her own campaign ad featuring the parents of late Marine Jason Simcakoski that claims that — in the wake of the death — Baldwin “brought both parties together to help pass a law” to “make the VA accountabl­e and also to stop the overprescr­ibing of ” opioids.

That’s what we want to look at here.

The background

To be sure, Baldwin’s ad sidesteps what happened in Tomah and the role she and her office played in handling informatio­n from a whistleblo­wer.

As we have noted in earlier items:

❚ Problems at the Tomah VA first made news in January 2015, when the California-based Center for Investigat­ive Reporting exposed the overprescr­iption of opioid drugs by the facility. Doctors had been handing out so many narcotic painkiller­s that some veterans had taken to calling the place “Candy Land.”

❚ Prior to that, on Aug. 29, 2014, Baldwin’s office received a report from the Department of Veterans Affairs’ Office of Inspector General following a 2½year investigat­ion of Tomah. Baldwin did not make the report public, though she shared it with a constituen­t who had complained to her about what was happening at Tomah. The report was not given to any other member of Congress at the time.

❚ A day later, Simcakoski died of a “mixed use toxicity” overdose at the Tomah VA while being treated by doctors there. Simcakoski had checked himself into the facility citing an addiction to painkiller­s and severe anxiety. He was prescribed 15 drugs, including anti-psychotics, tranquiliz­ers, muscle relaxants and the opioid painkiller Tramadol.

❚ In fact, after months of criticism about inaction on a whistleblo­wer’s complaints about Tomah, Baldwin acknowledg­ed her office had made mistakes, leading her to fire one staffer, demote another and dock the pay of her chief of staff.

Vukmir has hammered Baldwin for months over the issue.

During a September appearance on “Capital City Sunday” on WKOW-TV, she said Baldwin was the only member of the Wisconsin congressio­nal delegation “to have a report outlining that a doctor was overprescr­ibing opioids” at the Tomah VA, “later a veteran died” and Baldwin “covered it up.”

We rated Vukmir’s overall claim Mostly False.

We found that Baldwin was the only one with the report and that she didn’t make the report public or go public with her concerns until the scandal made news. But she received the report only a day before the veteran died and — while she did not publicize it — an investigat­ion by the U.S. Senate Ethics Select Committee into allegation­s of a coverup found the complaints lacked merit.

Now to Baldwin’s claim

What happened next

In her claim, Baldwin is referring to legislatio­n she co-authored — the “Jason Simcakoski Memorial and Promise Act.” On the campaign trail, Baldwin has referred to it as “Jason’s Law.”

And that’s what Baldwin’s campaign pointed to when we asked for evidence to support her claim.

“Jason’s Law includes multiple measures designed to hold the VA system more accountabl­e for the care of veterans and provide stricter opioid prescripti­on guidelines,” said campaign spokesman Bill Neidhardt. “Since being signed into law, Jason’s Law has helped improve the VA, where they’ve seen lower opioid prescribin­g rates and increased numbers of physicians who receive updated training.”

Now to the specifics:

Bipartisan bill: According to a June 22, 2015, news release, Baldwin and U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, RW.Va., introduced the initial measure. The news release shows supporters at the time included 11 other senators — nine of them Democrats and two of them Republican­s. Among the Republican­s: Ron Johnson of Wisconsin.

A July 13, 2016, report from WSAW TV and The Associated Press said Baldwin’s bill and one from U.S. Rep. Ron Kind, a Wisconsin Democrat, were included in the Comprehens­ive Addiction and Recovery Act, or CARA, made up of 12 bills.

That measure passed the Senate in a 94-1 vote. On July 22, 2016, President Barack Obama signed the package into law.

Johnson himself referred to the measure as “a bipartisan step.”

VA accountabi­lity/overprescr­ibing: That portion of the claim is supported by a May 9 appearance by VA Deputy Under Secretary Carolyn Clancy on C-SPAN.

In the interview, Clancy said “we’ve seen a 47 percent decrease in the number of veterans on chronic opioids in Tomah, which is a little ahead of the national average. We’ve made great progress overall. For the proportion of patients on both a benzodiaze­pine and an opioid, which has a very high risk of adverse events, the decrease has been 76 percent at Tomah, which is a little bit ahead of the national decrease.”

In April, the Tomah VA became one of 18 veterans hospitals across the country involved in the “Whole Health” program. The program considers the physical, mental, emotional, spiritual and environmen­tal elements that work together to provide the best quality of life for each veteran, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans’ Affairs.

“We will never eradicate the need for opioids, but I think by combining it with the nontraditi­onal therapy and taking the whole look at the veteran and veterans’ needs, we will be able to manage pain and still let the veterans have a quality of life that they need,” Victoria Brahm, director of the Tomah VA, said in an April 23 Associated Press story.

So, on the narrow points of Baldwin’s claim, she is on target — even as she ignores missteps by her office that could have mitigated the problems.

Alec Zimmerman, spokesman for the Republican Party of Wisconsin, said Baldwin had left “our state’s heroes in danger” and that rather than taking immediate action “was trying to save her political future.”

Our rating

A Baldwin campaign ad claims she “brought both parties together to help pass a law” to “make the VA accountabl­e and also to stop the overprescr­ibing of ” opioids.

The action came only after the overprescr­iption scandal made headlines — something ignored in the ad. Likewise, the ad sidesteps key missteps by Baldwin’s own office.

Neverthele­ss, the claims in this ad are narrowly drawn.

We rate Baldwin’s claim Mostly

True.

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