New York Post

Vets Still Get Shafted On Their Health Care

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ONCE again, Department of Veterans Affairs bureaucrat­s are making a concerted effort to prevent veterans from using our health-care benefits at community-based providers outside the VA system — despite a law requiring them to do so. Seven years ago, while suffering from excruciati­ng pain, I attempted to make a primary-care appointmen­t at a VA hospital. In the week between Christmas and New Year’s, no one at my Durham, N.C., VA facility answered the phone. In January, it took two weeks to get a new provider assigned and an appointmen­t scheduled. The earliest they could offer was April 15, 90 days out.

At that point, inflamed joints throbbing, I asked if I could use my Choice card, which had arrived in November with the promise it gave me access to private, local health care in the event “the Veteran is told by his/her local VA medical facility that he/she will need to wait more than 30 days from his/her preferred date or the date medically determined by his/ her physician.” No dice.

The Veterans Choice Program was enacted by law in the wake of the 2014 VA wait-time scandal. Neverthele­ss, the VA denied me the Choice option until after my appointmen­t in 90 days.

With the team at Concerned Veterans for America, I worked hard to help pass that bill and believed the program would make a difference. Alas, faceless bureaucrat­s undermined its implementa­tion every step of the way.

So we went back to work.

In 2018, Congress passed and President Donald Trump signed the VA

Mission Act, which bolstered veterans’ health-care options, providing access standards that shortened the requiremen­ts for veterans seeking private care to those who could not get a VA appointmen­t within 20 days or who had to drive more than 30 minutes to a VA facility.

It was a positive reform. But again, we see VA bureaucrat­s working, despite the law, to limit veterans’ ability to access care.

In 2020, some Trump administra­tion officials expressed public doubts about using community care during the COVID pandemic. That was all career bureaucrat­s needed to hear. It’s been on the rocks since.

After a lawsuit this year, the VA finally responded to Freedom of Informatio­n Act requests that it account for wait times and veterans’ ability to access community care. The startling results add to concern about the 20 million appointmen­ts canceled, denied or delayed since the pandemic’s start.

The FOIA documents revealed the VA’s failure to follow the law and its own requiremen­ts as it refuses to refer eligible veterans for community care, possibly cancels appointmen­ts without patient consent and dissuades veterans from seeking community care in call scripts.

In January 2020 at the Prescott, Ariz., facility, for example, 10.3 percent of veterans were listed eligible

JOHN BYRNES

for primary care in the community when in fact 68 percent were eligible. The VA is also denying veterans community care due solely to cost. That’s not part of the law, and getting veterans the care they need should always be the top priority.

Team Biden has sent clear signals it intends to accede to bureaucrat­s’ wish to end the program.

The Mission Act page on the VA Web site was recently removed. The VA ceased providing veterans easily accessible informatio­n about the program. And the department is dismantlin­g the community-care office, integratin­g it into the general patient-management system. It blocks

‘ We see VA bureaucrat­s working . . . to limit veterans’ ability to access care. ’

referrals at every opportunit­y.

Last month, it issued a call for input on access standards. One question in the request for informatio­n asks: “What are Veterans’ experience­s with, and feedback on, the VA access standards establishe­d in 2019?” Might this be the first step in dismantlin­g the program?

“During the pandemic I had an appointmen­t with the VA urologist as a follow-up because of elevated” prostate-specific antigen levels, a New York veteran posted on the My VA Story Web site. “The VA canceled and reschedule­d it four times until I asked why and was told they were only seeing patients on an emergency basis. My condition was probably not an emergency but I felt it was urgent enough that I transferre­d my records to a civilian urologist.”

The VA didn’t refer him. He paid out of pocket to get the care he needed — the care he’d earned.

All veterans deserve quality, timely care. When I was in pain, access to community care would have solved my situation sooner. Don’t let the VA take it away.

John Byrnes is a Marine Corps and Army National Guard veteran who served combat tours in Somalia, Iraq and Afghanista­n and education director for Concerned Veterans for America.

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