From Military.com:
“Millions of VA Appointments
Canceled During Pandemic Have Not Been Rescheduled”
As Department of Veterans Affairs
medical centers geared up in early March to respond to the unfolding COVID-19
pandemic, many moved to cancel elective procedures and in-person medical
appointments in an effort to protect patients and staff from exposure and focus
on coronavirus care. From March 15 through June 15, the Veterans Health
Administration -- or the veterans themselves -- canceled 11.2 million
appointments across the system. While roughly 5 million of those appointments
were tracked -- either conducted by telephone, video or rescheduled, at least
3.3 million needed the same type of follow-up and didn’t get it, the VA Office
of Inspector General said in a report released Tuesday. The OIG review remains
ongoing as inspectors look over the remaining canceled appointments, as well as
efforts to reschedule and reach out to veterans. The lack of follow-up, OIG
inspectors said, may put patients at increased risk of not getting needed
medical care. "The OIG recognizes the efforts of VHA personnel to manage
the needs of patients during the COVID-19 pandemic," inspectors wrote in
the report, "Appointment Management During the COVID-19 Pandemic."
"Avoiding non-urgent, face-to-face appointments was warranted but
unfortunately increased the risk of patients not receiving rescheduled
appointments."
Beginning in early March, some VA
facilities began screening patients for fever and other symptoms of the
SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus, which was first reported as a cluster in Wuhan, China,
on Dec. 31. VA medical centers also began restricting visitors to nursing home
facilities and inpatient wards, as well as spinal cord and traumatic brain
injury facilities. Later, hospitals and clinics stopped all non-essential care
and, according to the OIG, started canceling appointments. From March 15 to May
1, 7.3 million appointments were canceled, and a third of those, or 2.3
million, received no follow-up. Slightly more than 1 million were converted to
telehealth appointments, mainly by telephone, the OIG noted. Exactly how many
appointments were canceled by VA staff or patients themselves is unknown: On
March 22, the VHA directed employees to classify all dropped appointments as
canceled by the patient unless the provider was not available, according to the
OIG. The VHA rationalized this as reasonable, because in a national health care
crisis, "It is in the veteran's best interest and there is agreement by
the veteran," according to the report. The VA reversed the guidance in
April, but the classification distinction remains important. Under normal
circumstances, VA medical facilities usually follow up on appointments canceled
by clinics but not by patients.
The VA OIG estimates that about a
third of the appointments nixed from March 22 to May 1 were classified as being
canceled by the patient, leaving those patients to reschedule appointments
themselves and resetting the wait to be seen. The VA told OIG inspectors that
it has instructed staff to follow up on all cancellations during the period,
regardless of classification. According to the report, VA facilities also
canceled or discontinued more than a half million consults for specialty care,
causing delays in care for veterans who need higher-level services. The
disparities have left some veterans, like Gary Fiffe, without reliable medical
care for months. "They've canceled probably 10 appointments on me,"
Fiffe told Military.com. "The Topeka VA is doing lab work in the parking
lot in your car. There are people who have the best [personal protective
equipment] -- masks, gloves -- in the world, and they won't let people in the
hospital, only if you are on death's door. The clinic in the town where I live
is basically fully staffed yet seeing a limited amount of patients." “The
hospital shutdown for a handful of people hurt countless others," wrote
another Military.com reader. "The fact is, vets were turned away."
Appointment scheduling and
patient wait times have long been a challenge for the VA, dating to 2012 when
the Government Accountability Office noted shortcomings in the system. A
scandal erupted in 2014 over patient appointment wait times and off-the-books
schedules at VA medical centers and elsewhere. The OIG expressed concern that
the department will lose track of patients who need appointments at a VA
facility or a referral to community care and made several recommendations, to
include developing a strategy to reschedule patients, monitor facilities'
progress and take follow-on action on canceled consults. VHA officials
concurred with the recommendations, saying it has completed plans and will
conduct oversight. Since the outbreak began, more than 52,000 veterans,
employees and others treated at the VA have contracted COVID-19. Of those,
2,937 have died. Currently, 3,147 patients are being treated for the
coronavirus in the VA health system.
^ While it is understandable that
the appointments were cancelled at the height of the pandemic it is not
understandable why the VA has not rescheduled the 3.3 million cancelled
appointments by now. It shows the long tradition of the VA not putting the
Veteran first. ^
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