From Military.com:
“VA Facilities Continue to Hide
Doctors' Misconduct, Probes Find”
A Department of Veterans Affairs
hospital in Richmond, Virginia, rehired a pathologist who had been previously
fired for failing to diagnose or misdiagnosing cancer in at least a dozen
patients, the VA Office of Inspector General reported Wednesday. None of the
incidents were reported as adverse events to patient safety officials at the
facility, the Hunter Holmes McGuire VA Medical Center, including one involving
a patient whose misdiagnosis caused their condition to worsen, later requiring
advanced medical treatment. The report is the second in two days from the VA
OIG to expose physician failures at VA hospitals that went unchecked by
administrators. On Tuesday, the VA OIG released a report finding that the
department took nine months to fire an emergency room contract physician who,
after deciding a patient was "malingering" and "ranting,"
called VA police to have the patient escorted off property and said they could
go "shoot [themselves]. I do not care." The veteran died by suicide
six days later from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
In 2017, the Government
Accountability Office reported that VA medical center officials regularly
failed to investigate complaints lodged against providers or waited months to
look into allegations. The report also found that when the VA revoked doctors'
privileges, officials often failed to inform state licensing boards or a
national database, allowing the doctors to practice elsewhere. The VA also
sometimes reached settlements with physicians that allowed them to resign in
exchange for not reporting their errors. In subsequent congressional hearings
on the issue, VA officials pledged to address the problems, including reporting
adverse actions at the state and national levels. But the OIG report released
Wednesday indicates that hospital officials continue to engage in cover-ups. According
to the report, the hospital's Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Services chief
wasn't even aware of the VA's requirement to report the misdiagnoses to
higher-ups. Senior officials also weren't aware they were supposed to
participate in a state licensing review board process following the incidents. The
physician was fired but appealed the termination. In March 2019, the doctor was
rehired, and clinical privileges were restored. As of last September, the
physician continued to work at Hunter Holmes McGuire as an investigation was
ongoing into his or her ability to turn around surgical readings in a timely
manner. Likewise, at the Washington, D.C., VA Medical Center, officials failed
to dismiss the physician, a contractor, who verbally abused the suicidal
veteran even though other employees reported the incident and the doctor had
been the subject of other reports of "verbal misconduct." The report
noted that the doctor remained as a physician at the VA because reviews found
his or her care of patients to be sufficient. The Washington, D.C., VA
eventually ended the physician's contract, according to the report. President
Donald Trump frequently touts changes that his administration has made to
"fix" the VA, including accountability legislation approved in 2017
that accelerated the process for firing workers for misconduct or poor
performance, as well as shortening the time employees have for processing
appeals. "I signed the VA Accountability Act into law, and we've removed
more than 9,000 VA workers who were not giving our veterans the care, respect,
attention that they've earned. And now that we have accountability -- it's
'accountability;' a very nice word -- if an employee of the government
mistreats our veterans in any way, does something wrong, isn't good for the VA,
the secretary looks at them and says, "You're fired. Get out," Trump
said in a speech June 17 to introduce his plan for reducing veteran suicides. The
OIG reports this week, however, indicate that the VA still struggles to hold
physicians accountable and to protect veteran patients or the public, in cases
of physicians who go on to practice at civilian facilities after leaving the
department. In Richmond, VA officials failed to conduct a state licensing board
review and in Washington, D.C., the doctor was never reported to the state and
national boards that record physician misconduct. "Facility leaders did
not report [the Washington, D.C.] physician to the State Licensing Board or
National Practitioner Data Bank. Although facility leaders did not conduct a
formal investigation, they removed [the physician] from the VA contract ... and
therefore, facility leaders had a duty to report," the VA OIG wrote. "Neither
the former Facility Director nor the Chief of Staff completed all elements of a
[VA]-required review upon discovery of the subject pathologist's 'egregious
performance,'" the VA OIG wrote.
^ The VA has a long way to go
before it can claim to be providing Veterans with quality care. The constant Government
Reports confirm that. ^
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