This May 19, 2014 photo shows a a
sign in front of the Veterans Affairs building in Washington, DC. The VA
and Secretary Eric Shinseki are under fire amid reports by former and
current VA employees that up to 40 patients may have died because of
delayed treatment at an agency hospital in Phoenix, Arizona. AFP PHOTO /
Karen BLEIER (Photo credit should read KAREN BLEIER/AFP/Getty
Images)
Scott Olson, Getty Images
1Comment
Share
Tweet
Stumble
Email
Subpar
conditions at a Washington, D.C., VA medical center have prompted a
scathing report from the agency’s inspector general and the dismissal of
the hospital’s director.
The report, signed by Inspector General
Michael Massie, says inspectors “identified a number of serious and
troubling deficiencies at the Medical Center that place patients at
unnecessary risk.” Although the report said the inspector general’s
office had not yet found any “adverse patient outcomes,” it goes on to
detail unsanitary conditions, poor management by administrators, and a
lack of critical supplies.
PlayVideo
Trump taps Obama appointee to head VA dept.
“Since January 1, 2014, the Medical Center has recorded 194
patient safety reports relating to the unavailability of equipment or
supplies,” the report states. At times the hospital borrowed equipment
from a nearby private hospital, although sometimes operations proceeded
despite basic materials not being in the medical center’s possession.
Inspectors
also found that 18 of the 25 sterile storage areas they looked at were
dirty. The hospital serves some 98,000 veterans in the Washington, D.C.
area.
It is rare for the VA inspector general to release such a
report, but the IG did so in this case to alert the public to conditions
at the medical center.
“Although our work is continuing, we
believed it appropriate to publish this Interim Summary Report given the
exigent nature of the issues we have preliminarily identified and the
lack of confidence in VHA adequately and timely fixing the root causes
of these issues,” the report states.
The director of the medical
center has now “temporarily been assigned to administrative duties,” and
a new acting director has been named. The report cautions, however,
that “there are numerous and critical open senior staff positions that
will make prompt remediation of these issues very challenging.”
The VA system has come under fire over the last several years after numerous deficiencies were found in medical centers nationwide. In 2014, for example, it was found that dozens of veterans had died in the Phoenix area while awaiting care.
“Our
inspection is continuing and we will publish a final report with any
additional recommendations when our work is completed,” the report
concludes.
No comments:
Post a Comment