USA TODAY International Edition

Vet groups: Fix care at VA nursing homes

‘Disregard for veteran safety’ cited in report

- From Staff Reports

WASHINGTON – Six veterans’ groups are calling on the Department of Veterans Affairs to improve the quality of care at its nursing homes following a story by USA TODAY and The Boston Globe detailing “blatant disregard for veteran safety” at a VA nursing home in Massachuse­tts.

“Anybody who respects veterans should be angered by this,” American Legion National Commander Brett Reistad said. “America’s veterans deserve better.”

The groups, who together represent nearly 5 million members, said veterans who risked their lives for our country shouldn’t have to risk their lives in VA nursing homes.

In Brockton, Massachuse­tts, investigat­ors found two nurses asleep during their shifts, even though the facility knew it was under scrutiny and inspectors were coming to visit, looking for potential signs of patient neglect. A whistleblo­wer had reported that nurses and aides did not empty the bedside urinals of frail veterans, they failed to provide clean water at night and didn’t check on the veterans regularly. The VA said the napping nurses no longer work at the facility.

The story was the latest in an investigat­ion by USA TODAY and the Globe that revealed care at many VA nursing facilities was worse than at private nursing homes in the agency’s own internal ratings, kept secret from veterans for years.

The stories detailed disturbing examples of substandar­d care – a veteran with undiagnose­d scabies for months, another struggling to eat in Bedford, Massachuss­etts; and a third sitting for hours in soiled sheets and another writhing in pain without medication in West Palm Beach, Florida.

A Navy veteran was declared dead after he walked out of a supposedly secure VA nursing home and was never found in Tuskegee, Alabama. An Army vet landed in intensive care suffering from malnutriti­on, septic shock and bed sores after a stay at a VA nursing home in Livermore, California.

“The stories being reported about the treatment of some individual veterans at these facilities are nothing short of horrifying,” said Rege Riley, national commander of American Veterans, known as AmVets. He called on VA Secretary Robert Wilkie to “take swift and transparen­t action to fix this.”

Veterans of Foreign Wars, Disabled Veterans of America, Paralyzed Veter-

ans of America and Vietnam Veterans of America joined AmVets and the Legion in calling for action. Together, the groups are known as the “big six” and wield significant clout in Washington.

“The VA must address and correct these issues,” said Garry Augustine, executive director of Disabled Veterans of America.

VA spokesman Curt Cashour said the residents the VA typically cares for are sicker than those in private nursing homes, making “achieving good quality ratings more challengin­g.” He said that overall, VA nursing homes “compare well” with the private sector.

“We look forward to briefing each of these groups in the near future regarding these crucial facts,” Cashour said.

The VA has 133 nursing homes across the country that serve 46,000 veterans annually.

Newly released VA data show that 95 of them – about 71 percent – scored worse than private nursing homes on a majority of quality indicators, such as rates of infection, serious pain and bed sores. Roughly the same number, 93, received only one or two stars out of five for quality in the agency’s own ratings.

In a scathing statement declaring those facilities “failures,” VFW National Commander Vincent “B.J.” Lawrence said the VA “must improve its delivery of quality care at these facilities.”

Reistad, the Legion’s commander, added, “We not only expect VA to fix these problems immediatel­y, but we want transparen­cy.” On Sunday, after meeting with VA officials, he said he is confident they will work with the Legion and the other groups to “institute needed improvemen­ts.”

The VA released the quality informatio­n on its nursing homes only after learning in June that USA TODAY and the Globe planned to publish it. The agency still has not released the results of inspection­s.

The reports can include instances of neglect or poor conditions that can be a tip-off to current and prospectiv­e residents about problems at a facility.

“I don’t see how veterans are best served by the VA not being open about the level of care it’s providing,” AmVets spokesman John Hoellwarth said.

Cashour said the VA is working with an outside contractor who conducts the inspection­s, Wisconsin-based Long Term Care Institute, to remove patient informatio­n from its reports before they are released, maybe by the end of the year. Private nursing homes have three years’ worth of inspection reports posted on a federal website, Nursing Home Compare.

In September, Congress passed and President Donald Trump signed into law legislatio­n requiring the VA to publish quality ratings going forward. The law does not mention inspection reports.

The Republican-led House VA Committee launched an investigat­ion of VA nursing home care after the initial USA TODAY and Globe reports, but a spokeswoma­n, Molly Jenkins, said the probe won’t be finished in time to hold a hearing this year as anticipate­d. The Democrat poised to take over the committee in January, Rep. Mark Takano of California, said it is a “critical issue that will continue to be a priority.”

In Massachuse­tts, home to two, onestar VA nursing homes – in Bedford and Brockton – lawmakers are demanding to know what steps the VA has taken to improve patient care there and at other facilities around the country.

“The continued care lapses at VA facilities raise questions about whether concrete, lasting measures are being implemente­d to prevent misconduct from occurring again – or whether certain VA facilities are unable to institute changes necessary to provide our veterans with the care befitting their service to the country,” Sens. Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren, both Democrats from Massachuse­tts, wrote in a letter to Wilkie.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY 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.
FILE PHOTO BY 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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