USA TODAY US Edition

Lawmakers demand secret VA nursing home data

Agency downplays picture of poor care

- Donovan Slack and Andrea Estes

WASHINGTON – Several members of Congress demanded Tuesday that the Department of Veterans Affairs release a full complement of nursing home data that the agency has kept hidden from the public for years, citing a recent USA TODAY and Boston Globe investigat­ion into the state of care at VA facilities.

The VA pushed back Tuesday on the report, which was based on the agency’s own internal documents and facility ratings, by downplayin­g the findings and calling the story “fake news.”

The internal documents show that care at the VA’s 133 nursing homes scored worse on average than private sector homes on key quality indicators, including rates of anti-psychotic drug prescripti­on and residents’ deteriorat­ion.

Following inquiries from USA TODAY and the Globe, the VA last week released some of its nursing home ratings, but not the underlying quality data, such as rates of infection and injury. The agency has tracked this informatio­n for years, but kept it from public view.

“Widespread underperfo­rmance at VA nursing homes is a betrayal of veterans’ trust and wellbeing,” said Minnesota Rep. Tim Walz, the highest ranking Democrat on the House Veterans Affairs Committee. “VA concealing this data from the public until news stories were about to be filed makes matters infinitely worse and is nothing more than fake transparen­cy.

“Veterans and their loved ones deserve real accountabi­lity and transparen­cy at VA, and that is why I am calling on VA to make all nursing home data, especially key quality indicators such as rates of injury and infection, available to the public immediatel­y.”

Both the Republican-led House and Senate VA committees requested briefings from VA officials following the report. Those meetings are scheduled later this week, spokespeop­le for the committees said.

VA press secretary Curt Cashour, meanwhile, took to Twitter to claim that prior to Trump’s presidency, “you haven’t seen this much VA transparen­cy or accountabi­lity,” and to call the story about the secret nursing home data “the definition of fake news.”

Cashour on Tuesday claimed the story painted “a misleading picture of how our facilities actually compare with the private sector.”

The ratings showed that as of March 31, nearly half of VA nursing homes – 58 – received the lowest rating for quality in the agency’s rankings of one out of five stars.

Cashour declined to answer questions about why the VA hasn’t released the underlying nursing home quality data, inspection reports, or staffing data.

He asserted that “overall,” the VA nursing home system “compares closely” with the private sector. But he said VA nursing homes score lower on key quality indicators because veterans are typically sicker than residents of private facilities.

“Also, private sector nursing homes admit patients selectivel­y, whereas – unlike the private sector – VA will not refuse service to any eligible veteran, no matter how challengin­g the veteran’s conditions are to treat,” Cashour said.

Lawmakers demanding the VA release all its nursing home data include Massachuse­tts Democratic Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey, Alabama Sen. Doug Jones, and Massachuse­tts Rep. Seth Moulton, also Democrats.

Cashour said “VA appreciate­s the lawmakers’ concerns and will respond to them directly.”

 ??  ?? Rep. Tim Walz
Rep. Tim Walz

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