From Military.com:
“50,000 Extra VA Patients Died
in 2020 Compared to Normal, Study Finds”
More than 50,000 Veterans Affairs
patients died in 2020 than expected based on previous years -- a finding that
provides additional insight into the true impact of the pandemic on the veteran
community, according to a new study. The study, set to be published next year
in The Lancet Regional Health - Americas but released online Oct. 30, found
that 17% more VA patients died in March through December at VA than expected
from all causes, including COVID-19, compared with 2016-2018. By the end of
2020, VA had slightly more than 7,000 confirmed COVID-19 deaths. That means
that 44,000 of the deaths above the roughly 375,000 the VA averages yearly were
either COVID-related but not categorized accordingly, or they were preventable,
caused by something that would have otherwise been treatable in a year when
hospitals weren't overwhelmed or people stayed home.
VA researcher Kevin Griffith, an
assistant professor at Vanderbilt University's Department of Health Policy,
said statistics that focus only on confirmed COVID-19 deaths "really
understate the human suffering the pandemic is causing." "What you
want to count is the number of people who would still be alive today, not just
those who died of COVID," Griffith said during an interview with
Military.com. The researcher set out to determine the number of excess deaths
in 2020 overall and for individual VA medical facilities, thinking the data
could be useful for the department while it examines its pandemic response and
plans for the next national emergency. They found that compared with the
general U.S. population, VA had fewer excess deaths -- a data point they found
surprising, given that VA serves an older patient population with complex
medical issues.
According to a study published in
April in JAMA Network, during the same period, the U.S. saw more than 522,300
excess deaths, up 23% from previous years, including more than 350,000 from
COVID-19. “VA did better than expected, and we think a lot of it is related to
its very strong response, very robust response to the COVID pandemic early,”
Griffith said. While the team did not explore why VA fared better during the
pandemic, researchers theorized that VA patients were able to maintain access
to medical services while many in the general population lost their medical
insurance as the result of unemployment. VA also ramped up its telehealth
capabilities, locked down nursing homes and facilities with high-risk patients
and canceled elective procedures early on. "The VA dusted off all their
pandemic plans, rewrote them, stockpiled ventilators and had staff
training," Griffith said. "Giving credit where it's due,
[then-Secretary Robert Wilkie] had a population at high risk for severe COVID,
and he managed to navigate the early days of the pandemic better than
expected."
The study found that areas hit
hardest by the pandemic tended to have higher excess deaths -- places like the
VA medical facilities in VA New York Harbor Health Care System in New York City
and Beckley VA Medical Center in West Virginia, while others did not see a
spike, including the VA Southern Nevada Healthcare System in Las Vegas and the
Chillicothe VA Medical Center in Ohio. Griffith said VA could look to those VA
medical centers to determine "best practices" and shortcomings during
a future crisis. "This level of data allows us to see how well specific
policies mattered, how different health system's response mitigated the
pandemic," Griffith said. Since March 2020, there have been 376,424 cases
of COVID-19 among VA patients, and 15,536 have died. "There's this
perception that the VA is terrible for quality of care, and everyone hates it,
which makes sense because any time VA does anything bad, it makes the news. But
the VA in this case didn't mess around," Griffith said.
^ This is very surprising, interesting
and sad. ^
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