Tuesday, July 21, 2015

VA Scandal: Facility Manager In Georgia Indicted For Falsifying Records

fiercehealthcare
July 21, 2015 | By 

Lawyer cites pressure from superiors to clear backlog


The manager of a Veterans Affairs (VA) facility in Georgia has been indicted for falsifying the medical records of veterans awaiting care outside the VA system,according to the Washington Post.
Cathedral Henderson was responsible for revenue and billing at the Charlie Norwood VA Medical Center in Augusta, as well as coordinating care for the more than 2,700 veterans awaiting approval for outside care under a much-touted initiative to increase care access for waitlisted veterans.
Last year, under pressure to close out all requests for outside care, prosecutors say Henderson told VA employees to fabricate records for 50 wait listed patients indicating they had completed or declined services. Of the patients whose records were falsified, two were waiting for imaging services, one was waiting for surgery, one for neurology and one for an ultrasound. The remaining 45 were awaiting mammograms.
Henderson, who faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine if convicted, is one of 130 VA employees disciplined in the wake of last year's nationwide VA scandal, which broke when CNN investigation revealed the Phoenix VA kept a "secret waitlist" to hide wait times. Last November, VA Secretary Robert McDonald announced  he would take wide-scale disciplinary action that could affect up to 1,000 employees. The VA may pursue further administrative action against Henderson, spokeswoman Victoria Dillon told the Post.  
Henderson, who is on paid leave from his position, is a considerably lower-level employee than the six senior VA hospital leaders fired for lying about wait times,according to a second Post article. Keith Johnson, Henderson's attorney, argued his client's actions were the result of pressure from his superiors in a chaotic, ill-equipped hospital environment. "There was an issue with consults, and he was asked to do something about it," Johnson told the Post.
But Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.) said in a statement that the indictment was cause for optimism. "While I regret that the alleged criminal actions by this indicted VA employee ever took place," Isakson wrote, "I am pleased that the investigation we called for in the wake of the Phoenix scandal is being done and people are being held accountable for manipulating medical appointment records when they should have been giving our veterans access to the care they need and deserve."
To learn more:
- here's the first Post article
- check out the second article
- read Isakson's statement
Related Articles:
VA scandal: McDonald announces major overhaul, firings
OIG: Delays, scheduling violations plague VA's private-care fix
VA promises to fix problems with late payments to private medical providers
VA scandal: Full OIG report finds "unacceptable" lapses within Phoenix facility
OIG report: No evidence care delays caused VA deaths
Lawmakers call for resignation of Phoenix VA head over secret waitlist
Secret VA wait list reveals 40 vets died while awaiting treatment
As FBI opens criminal probe, Congress pushes bill to improve veterans' access to care
VA scandal: Audit reveals 57,000 vets awaiting medical appointments
18 more vets dead as legislators pen VA reform bill
Investigation into VA wait lists expands to more hospitals
Senate sends VA reform bill to Obama's desk
House approves bill that allows veterans to bypass VA for medical care

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