Chattanooga Times Free Press

HERE’S HOW TO REVIVE THE VA

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Let’s play a quick game of word associatio­n. When we say: “U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs,” you say …

Many Americans would blurt: “scandal.”

Not wrong. Egregious example: revelation­s in 2014 of dangerousl­y long wait times for veterans in need of medical care, some of whom died while on ever-lengthenin­g wait lists. VA officials lied about — and attempted to cover up — those lists. More than 120 medical centers and clinics were flagged for a more extensive investigat­ion into patient access and scheduling practices.

VA Secretary Eric Shinseki took the fall. But flash forward. Now, after major investigat­ions and billions more spent, is the VA health system better? President Barack Obama says yes. “We’ve hired thousands more doctors, nurses, staff,” he told a recent conference of the Disabled American Veterans. “When we really put our sweat and tears and put our shoulder to the wheel, we can make things better.”

But for too many vets, Obama’s “better” is no good. Serious problems persist at the Veterans Health Administra­tion, the VA’s medical wing. And they’ll continue to persist until Congress and the White House feverishly commit to three goals:

Allow more veterans to seek medical care with private doctors. The more flexibilit­y in choosing providers, the better chance that veterans will get the excellent care they deserve.

Streamline and downsize the rest of the system to focus on specialize­d care for battle-related injuries that private docs can’t perform as well as VA staffers.

Fire workers who resist change or don’t perform.

A massive new report from the Commission on Care, created by Congress after the 2014 scandal, concludes: “Although VHA provides care that is in many ways comparable or better in clinical quality to that generally available in the private sector, it is inconsiste­nt from facility to facility, and can be substantia­lly compromise­d by problems with access, service, and poorly functionin­g operationa­l systems and processes.”

Among the commission’s 18 recommenda­tions for a sweeping overhaul: Create a more comprehens­ive and flexible “VHA care system.” That’s envisioned as a less rigid network of providers including doctors from the VA, military hospitals, other federally funded providers and facilities, and VA-credential­ed private doctors and clinics.

The commission also suggests that the current Veterans Choice program be expanded so that all vets can consult private physicians. Good idea: It doesn’t take a specialist in battlefiel­d wounds to prescribe blood pressure meds. In 2014, Congress passed Veterans Choice, which already allows many vets to choose a private doc outside the system if they live more than 40 miles from a VA facility or have to wait more than 30 days for an appointmen­t.

Yet that law has led to billions of dollars in expenses, millions of square feet of new medical space … and even longer wait times at many VA facilities. One reason: The law not only mandated a complex new health system but ordered the VA to set it up in 90 days.

Predictabl­e result: bureaucrat­ic chaos.

Predictabl­e congressio­nal solution: Let’s throw more money at the VA!

In the decade since 2006, the VA’s budget has soared from $73 billion to $167 billion, with much of the growth in the health system. Staff, too, has ballooned. None of that has significan­tly dented the VA’s entrenched culture that disdains accountabi­lity.

For instance: The 2014 law streamline­d the process to fire VA executives who concealed the waiting-list scandal. Since then, however, only nine people have been fired for manipulati­ng wait times, The New York Times reports. And some of them could still get their jobs back after appeals. Maddening.

“If you don’t have accountabi­lity, and you know your job is safe whether you perform or not, it’s hard to make any progress,” Republican Sen. Johnny Isakson of Georgia tells the newspaper.

No plan to revive the VA will succeed until superior performanc­e is rewarded and poor performanc­e is punished.

Until then, count on more VA scandals, more excuses — and more American veterans cheated of the care they deserve.

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