Thursday, June 12, 2014

As FBI Opens Criminal Probe, Congress Pushes Bill To Improve Veteran's Care

fiercehealthcare;
As FBI Opens Criminal Probe, Congress Pushes Bill To Improve Veteran's Care

VA scandal unites Republicans and Democrats outraged by secret waitlists


As Congress moves ahead with bills to help thousands of veterans receive timely medical care, the FBI said Wednesday that it will conduct a criminal investigation into allegations that staff at Veteran Affairs facilities used secret waitlists to cover up the fact that patients had to wait months for care.

FBI Director James Comey told the House Judiciary Committee that the FBI launched an investigation in Phoenix, the site where the allegations first surfaced, according to Politico. "We will follow it wherever the facts take us," he said.

Acting VA Inspector General Richard Griffin said this week that the department is investigating 69 VA facilities for misconduct that came to light in April, after a retired doctor told CNN that the Phoenix facility had a secret wait list containing the names of thousands of veterans who had yet to receive care and at least 40 veterans died as a result of the delays.

The widespread allegations, confirmed by an internal audit and a preliminary investigation, infuriated the public and Congress, which in rare bipartisan agreement, took action this week to get a bill in the hands of President Barack Obama to allow veterans to receive medical care at outside facilities.

A day after the House approved a similar bill, the Senate Wednesday approved a bill to authorize the spending of $35 billion over three years to pay for outside care for veterans, hire hundreds of doctors and nurses for the VA and lease 26 new health facilities in 17 states and Puerto Rico. The Senate voted 93-3 in favor of the measure. Republican Senators Bob Corker of Tennessee, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and Jeff Sessions of Alabama voted against the bill.

White House officials told the AP that President Barack Obama supports the Senate bill. The main difference between the Senate and House version of the bill is that the Senate measure makes it easier to fire top VA officials but includes more employee safeguards, Komonews reports.

Lawmakers hope that Congress will be able to quickly compromise on a final version of the bill. "Maybe we can show the United States of America that people can come together on a very, very important issue and do it in rapid fashion," said Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), chairman of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, according to Komonews.

Meanwhile, the American public is following the VA scandal closely, according to a new Gallup poll. Sixty-nine percent of the 1,027 adults surveyed said they are following the situation "very" or "somewhat closely" in the wake of the resignation of VA Secretary Eric Shinseki and the widespread allegations of misconduct at VA facilities.  Providing timelier care and firing VA employees were among the top list of fixes supported by those surveyed.

To learn more:
- read the 
Politico article
- here's the text of the Senate 
bill (.pdf)
- check out the bill 
status
- read the AP 
article via ABC News
- see the 
Komonews article
- here's the Gallup 
poll

Related Articles:

VA scandal: Healthcare execs may face criminal charges
VA scandal: Audit reveals 57,000 vets awaiting medical appointments
18 more vets dead as legislators pen VA reform bill
Secret wait list reveals 40 vets died while awaiting treatment
Investigation into VA wait lists expands to more hospitals
Shinseki resigns as VA secretary amid scandal
Obama may tap Cleveland Clinic's Cosgrove to fix VA scandal
7 reasons Cleveland Clinic's Cosgrove is the right person to lead the VA system
Cleveland Clinic's Cosgrove says no to VA job
Preliminary report: Delay in care rampant through VA healthcare system


Thank You FierceHealthcare and Ms McDonald.


And Both Republicans and Democrats are United in their Outrage.

So, What? 

What they're both United in is needing Face Time in the media telling America that they are 'Outraged'.


Want the VA actually fixed? Shut down all of its patient care facilities and give the Vets and Active Duty Personnel a simple, cheap, Military Medical Benefits I.D. Card, usable at the Hospital or Clinic of their choice, who will then Bill what remains of the VA for their end of the deal.

Will this completely solve the problem? No. But it will remove the problem one step further from the pre-ordained certainty of entrenched, Govt. Bureaucrats running a system which Can, Not, Fail itself into Oblivion through Bankruptcy, . . . because Congress will keep bailing it out no matter How badly it screws up.


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