From a Department of Veterans Affairs News Release
WASHINGTON, July 16, 2014 – In testimony before the Senate
Veterans Affairs Committee yesterday, Acting VA Secretary Sloan D. Gibson
outlined serious problems regarding access to health care and key actions the
department has taken to get veterans off waiting lists and into clinics.
“The trust that is the foundation of all we do -- the trust
of the veterans we serve and the trust of the American people and their elected
representatives -- has eroded,” Gibson said. “We have to earn that trust back
through deliberate and decisive action, and by creating an open and transparent
approach for dealing with our stakeholders to better serve veterans.”
Gibson discussed six priorities to begin restoring trust:
-- Get veterans off waiting lists and into clinics;
-- Fix systemic scheduling problems;
-- Address cultural issues;
-- Hold people accountable where willful misconduct or
management negligence are documented;
-- Establish regular and ongoing disclosures of information;
and
-- Quantify the resources needed to consistently deliver
timely, high-quality health care.
Gibson said VA needs about $17.6 billion in additional
resources to meet current demand for the remainder of fiscal year 2014 through
fiscal 2017. This funding, he added, would address challenges such as clinical
staff, space, information technology and the benefits processing necessary to
provide timely, high-quality care and benefits.
“We understand the seriousness of the problems we face,” the
acting secretary said. “We own them. We are taking decisive action to begin to
resolve them. We can turn these challenges into the greatest opportunity for
improvement in the history of the department.”
Gibson also outlined actions VA is taking now to address
problems with access to VA health care:
-- The Veterans Health Administration has reached out to
more than 160,000 veterans to get them off waiting lists and into clinics. VHA
also has made more than 543,000 referrals for veterans to receive care in the
private sector -- 91,000 more than in the comparable period a year ago.
-- VHA facilities are adding more clinic hours, aggressively
recruiting to fill physician vacancies, deploying mobile medical units, using
temporary staffing resources, and expanding the use of private-sector care.
-- VA is moving rapidly to augment and improve its existing
scheduling system while simultaneously pursuing the purchase of a
state-of-the-art system.
-- Gibson has directed medical center and network directors
to conduct monthly inspections, in person, of their clinics to assess the state
of scheduling practices and to identify any related obstacles to timely care
for veterans. To date, more than 1,100 of these visits have been conducted.
-- Gibson has directed a comprehensive external audit of
scheduling practices across the entire VHA system.
-- Gibson has personally visited 10 VA medical centers in
the last six weeks to hear directly from the field on the actions being taken
to get veterans off waiting lists and into clinics, and he will continue to
make site visits.
-- The inappropriate 14-day access measure has been removed
from all individual employee performance plans to eliminate any motive for
inappropriate scheduling practices. In the course of completing this task, more
than 13,000 performance plans were amended.
-- Where willful misconduct or management negligence is
documented, appropriate personnel actions will be taken, including in cases of
whistleblower retaliation.
-- Gibson froze VHA Central Office and Veterans Integrated
Service Network Office headquarters hiring as a first step to ensure all
employees are working to support those delivering care directly to veterans.
-- VHA has dispatched teams to provide direct assistance to
facilities requiring the most improvement, including a large team now working
in Phoenix.
-- All VHA senior executive performance awards for fiscal
year 2014 have been suspended.
-- VHA is expanding use of private-sector care to improve
access.
-- Gibson sent a message to all 341,000 VA employees, and
has reiterated during every visit to VA facilities, that whistleblowers will be
protected, and that he will not tolerate retaliation against whistleblowers.
-- Gibson has conducted more than a dozen meetings and calls
with senior representatives of veteran and military service organizations and
other stakeholder groups to solicit their ideas for improving access and
restoring trust.
-- Gibson has made a number of personnel announcements in
recent weeks, including: Dr. Carolyn Clancy as interim undersecretary for
health; Dr. Jonathan Perlin, a former undersecretary for health, on temporary
assignment as senior advisor to the secretary; Dr. Gerard Cox as interim
director of the Office of Medical Inspector; and Leigh Bradley as special
counsel to the secretary.
-- As VA completes reviews, fact-finding, and other
investigations, the department is beginning to initiate personnel actions to
hold those accountable who committed wrongdoing or were negligent in
discharging their management responsibilities.
No comments:
Post a Comment