Los Angeles Times

VA is blamed for suicide attempt

A San Diego hospital repeatedly canceled a veteran’s mental care appointmen­ts, an investigat­ion finds.

- By Jeanette Steele jen.steele@sduniontri­bune.com Steele writes for the San Diego Union- Tribune.

San Diego VA hospital staff triggered a veteran’s suicide attempt in 2014 by repeatedly canceling his appointmen­ts, according to findings by the U. S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

The investigat­ion also found that at least two San Diego VA employees instructed appointmen­t clerks to “zero out” wait times in the scheduling database, presenting an unrealisti­cally positive picture of how long patients were waiting for care.

The VA’s inspector general issued the report Thursday as part of more than 70 investigat­ions released nationally over the last few weeks.

The investigat­ions of facilities across the country followed a sweeping scandal in 2014 that started over allegation­s of falsified wait times at a VA hospital in Phoenix.

The San Diego veteran, who was not named in the report, had three or four consecutiv­e mental healthcare appointmen­ts canceled by the VA leading up to his suicide attempt in 2014.

The investigat­ion found that 13% to 14% of his appointmen­ts were canceled with less than a day’s notice in 2013 and, in the following fiscal year, that number rose to between 24% and 27% for various clinics.

According to the report, “the veteran stated he used the cancellati­on of his appointmen­ts as an excuse to act out and attempted to harm himself. He said he regrets his actions and that he received help and now has follow- up appointmen­ts.”

A spokeswoma­n for the San Diego VA Healthcare System said employees have been held accountabl­e for the scheduling issues, but she declined to identify them.

In total, two staff members retired, two resigned, and two others faced “accountabi­lity actions,” spokeswoma­n Cindy Butler said. One of the people who faced “accountabi­lity action” was moved to a job with no scheduling responsibi­lity. The other stayed in the position.

In a statement Thursday, San Diego VA officials said the inspector general examined data from only early 2014, before leaders made an effort to address the issue.

The San Diego VA Healthcare System “has aggressive­ly trained and retrained all of our front- line personnel and supervisor­s to ensure compliance with scheduling procedures,” the statement said.

“Regular scheduling audits are conducted and staff are able to clearly articulate scheduling procedures. Where there were allegation­s and findings were validated, VASDHS took appropriat­e administra­tive actions.”

Under the 2014 Veterans Access, Choice and Accountabi­lity Act, VA patients facing long wait times can seek care in the private sector at taxpayer expense. More than 6,000 San Diego veterans have received care through the Choice program since October.

The report last week is the f irst official sign of trouble at the San Diego VA, which has been touted as a model by local veteran advocates and VA Secretary Robert McDonald.

The “One VA” committee concept began in San Diego and brings leaders from the veterans community together with local VA officials on a regular basis to air issues. McDonald has called for the idea to be duplicated nationally.

The inspector general’s investigat­ion was prompted by complaints from two San Diego VA employees in May 2014.

They alleged that a national team sent that month to audit the San Diego VA — in light of the national scandal — were presented with employees who were handpicked and coached to give a glowing picture.

Separately, in June 2014, a VA employee alerted the inspector general’s office about the veteran’s suicide attempt.

Investigat­ors noted that San Diego VA employees f irst raised concern about manipulate­d wait times in 2013, and discrepanc­ies were found in a follow- up inquiry. But apparently that early alarm bell went unheard.

The director of the San Diego VA Healthcare System at the time expressed surprise when faced with the inspector general’s conclusion­s, according to the report released last week.

“He said he was very surprised at our f indings as he had spoken to [ several employees] regarding the initial allegation­s and was told there was no altering of desired dates happening in the mental health department,” the report said.

Jeff Gering was the San Diego director from May 2012 until late December, when he left for a job at another San Diego healthcare system.

The investigat­ion found that an unnamed San Diego VA medical administra­tive officer put pressure on medical support assistants — the people who schedule appointmen­ts — to “zero out” the number of days that a veteran was waiting for an appointmen­t.

A mental health program analyst also played a role, the investigat­ion found.

In emails sent in April 2014, the analyst advised schedulers to call patients with wait times more than 14 days past their desired appointmen­t dates and offer them earlier visits, the inspector general’s report said.

If the veteran declined the earlier appointmen­t date, the scheduler was told to change the veteran’s desired date to the original appointmen­t date — making it appear there was no wait time, according to the report.

“The employee stated that, at the time, she thought that she was correct, but had now come to understand it is not the proper way to capture desired dates,” the report said.

 ?? Eduardo Contreras San Diego Union- Tribune ?? VETERANS AFFAIRS employees in San Diego repeatedly canceled appointmen­ts and were instructed to “zero out” wait times in the scheduling database, presenting a falsely positive picture of how long patients had to wait for care, the VA’s inspector...
Eduardo Contreras San Diego Union- Tribune VETERANS AFFAIRS employees in San Diego repeatedly canceled appointmen­ts and were instructed to “zero out” wait times in the scheduling database, presenting a falsely positive picture of how long patients had to wait for care, the VA’s inspector...

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