USA TODAY International Edition

More ailments at VA facilities

Nursing homes run by agency score lower than privately operated ones

- Donovan Slack and Andrea Estes

An analysis of internal documents shows residents at more than twothirds of Department of Veterans Affairs nursing homes last year were more likely to have serious bedsores, as well as suffer serious pain, than their counterpar­ts in private nursing homes across the country.

The analysis suggests large numbers of veterans suffered potential neglect or medication mismanagem­ent and provides a fuller picture of the state of care in the 133 VA nursing homes that serve 46,000 sick and infirm military veterans each year.

More than 100 VA nursing homes scored worse than private nursing homes on a majority of key quality indicators, which include rates of infection and decline in daily living skills, according to the analysis of data withheld by the VA from public view but obtained by USA TODAY and The Boston Globe.

The news organizati­ons reported last week that 60 VA nursing homes received the agency’s lowest quality ranking of one out of five stars last year, but the data didn’t detail how individual facilities scored on specific measures.

USA TODAY and The Globe are publishing the full data for every VA nursing facility as of Dec. 31, 2017.

Four VA facilities – nursing homes

in Bedford, Massachuse­tts; Chillicoth­e, Ohio; Tuscaloosa, Alabama; and Roseburg, Oregon – lagged private nursing home averages on 10 of 11 indicators.

At all four, about a third of residents were given anti-psychotic drugs – almost twice as much as in the private sector. The FDA has said such drugs are associated with an increased risk of death in patients with dementia.

“They should be assessing individual­s and doing what they can to manage it,” said Robyn Grant, director of public policy and advocacy at the National Consumer Voice for Quality Long-Term Care. “And if it’s not working, they should be trying different things.”

The VA has tracked the detailed quality data for more than two years but kept it secret, depriving veterans of potentiall­y crucial health care informatio­n.

‘Evaluating’ info to release

VA spokesman Curt Cashour declined to answer questions about whether the agency planned to release the quality informatio­n, as well as nursing home staff data the VA has compiled dating to 2004. He declined to say when the VA would release inspection reports the agency has kept secret for more than a decade.

After the investigat­ive report by USA TODAY and The Globe last week, Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., and Sen. Doug Jones, D-Ala., introduced legislatio­n that would force the VA to release all of its nursing home quality informatio­n at least once a year.

Acting VA Secretary Peter O’Rourke told the CBS affiliate in Dallas last week that VA officials were “evaluating exactly what is the most appropriat­e for us to put out there and that will support continuous improvemen­t and then also will provide good decisionma­king informatio­n for veterans.”

He called the USA TODAY and Globe reporting on the VA nursing home ratings “fake news.”

Federal regulation­s require private nursing homes to disclose voluminous data on the care they provide.

The federal government uses the data to calculate quality measures and posts them on a federal website, along with inspection results and staffing informatio­n.

The rules don’t apply to the VA.

‘More than disturbing’

The VA has used similar data internally to track quality as far back as 2011, according to a report in October that year from the nonpartisa­n Government Accountabi­lity Office.

At that point, the agency monitored at least two dozen factors. None of the informatio­n was released.

The review in 2011 found that 80 percent of the agency’s nursing homes had problems with medication management, but VA headquarte­rs wasn’t using the data “to detect patterns and trends in the quality of care and quality of life within a (VA nursing home) or across many (of them).”

The VA launched another tracking system in May 2016. It measures 11 indicators and assigns star ratings based on the indicators, which can be clues to larger problems with overall quality.

In the first 18 months under the new tracking system, VA nursing homes scored below private averages on eight of 11 indicators, according to internal documents and minutes from an advisory committee meeting.

By the end of 2017, the VA homes scored worse on average than their private sector counterpar­ts on nine of 11 key indicators.

In some cases, the internal documents show, the VA ratings were only slightly worse. In others, such as the number of residents in pain, VA nursing homes scored dramatical­ly worse.

Nick Bonanno, whose father, Russ, is a resident of the Bedford VA nursing home, said he believes the agency has withheld the informatio­n from the public to hide subpar care. “It’s more than disturbing,” Bonanno said.

He said his father was one of many veterans overmedica­ted at the VA. “But it is consistent with what appears to be an ingrained culture (top to bottom) of not being accountabl­e, and instead they hit the ‘easy’ button and cry ‘fake news’ and make excuses to justify poor results,” Bonanno said.

Jones said, “We’ve got to have the informatio­n. I’m just not going to take their word for it at this point.”

 ?? KELSEY CRONIN FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE ?? Nick Bonanno talks with his father, World War II veteran Rosario “Russ” Bonanno, inside the VA nursing home in Bedford, Mass.
KELSEY CRONIN FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE Nick Bonanno talks with his father, World War II veteran Rosario “Russ” Bonanno, inside the VA nursing home in Bedford, Mass.

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