Posted on Jul 14, 2015
SPC George Rudenko
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How would this effect you getting healthcare?

VA says it may shut down hospitals to close $2.5B budget gap
Associated Press By MATTHEW DALY
2 hours ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Department of Veterans Affairs may have to shut down some hospitals next month if Congress does not address a $2.5 billion shortfall for the current budget year, VA officials warned Monday.

The VA told Congress that it needs to cover shortfalls caused by an increased demand by veterans for health care, including costly treatments for hepatitis C. The agency also is considering furloughs, hiring freezes and other steps to close a funding gap for the budget year that ends Sept. 30.

The VA said it wants authority to use up to $3 billion from the new Veterans Choice program to close the budget gap, with as much as $500 million going to treat hepatitis C. A single pill for the liver-wasting viral infection can cost up to $1,000.

The Choice program, the centerpiece of a VA overhaul approved last year, makes it easier for veterans to receive federally paid medical care from local doctors. Congress approved $10 billion over three years for the Choice program as it responded to a scandal over long waits for veterans seeking medical care and falsified records to cover up the delays.

Deputy VA Secretary Sloan Gibson told Congress that VA health care sites experienced a 10.5 percent increase in workload for the one-year period since the scandal erupted in April 2014.

The VA needs flexibility from Congress to close the budget gap, Gibson said, adding that action is needed in the next three weeks to avoid drastic consequences.

Lawmakers from both parties faulted the VA for failing to announce the impending shortfall before last month. Lawmakers also criticized the agency for failing to anticipate or fix budget problems, including a failed VA hospital project in Denver that is more than $1 billion over budget.

Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, said he was troubled at "VA's continued lack of transparency and refusal to be forthright with Congress," but said, "veterans must not be penalized for VA's ongoing mismanagement."

"This is far from the first time VA has disclosed problems far too late and turned its blatant mismanagement into a fiscal emergency," Miller said Monday night. He called on President Barack Obama to "step up and become engaged" in order to "ensure VA's incompetence does not shut down hospitals and deny veterans the care they have earned


http://news.yahoo.com/va-says-may-shut-down-hospitals-close-2-203352507--politics.html
Edited >1 y ago
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Maj Kim Patterson
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The civilians don't want us or feel ill equipped for problems soldiers may present

Some Non-Federal Physicians Express Discomfort Treating Veterans

U.S. Medicine, July 2015
“The push to allow veterans more access to non-VA care — or even to bifurcate the system, as some have suggested, so that specific types of care always are provided by private-sector clinicians — might be overlooking a critical factor: Non-federal physicians might not be all that comfortable treating veterans. A recent survey of nearly 150 U.S. osteopathic physicians indicated a desire for more training to properly identify, communicate and treat veterans with military conditions, according to a report in the Journal of the American Osteopathic Association.1”
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Maj Kim Patterson
Maj Kim Patterson
>1 y
Two other things: how many vets have actually used the "The Veteran's Choice" card? And how do you ensure the records get back in the hands of the VA without forming huge gaps of "We don't have any record of that. Claim denied."
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SSG Trevor S.
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Edited >1 y ago
The sorry grabastic shortbus riders could do something novel like stop the frackery in Denver, fire some self-choking idiots and possibly spread that savings to be available for the rest of this great country's Veterans.
And the wonderful awesomeness of the situation is that the numbskull in charge wants to take money from a program that could help Veterans get care without traveling like an OTR truck driver instead of deep sixing the failed construction in Denver. Seriously, I can't imagine people failing this hard by waking up and saying to themselves, "Gee I want to see if I can make the guinness Book of World Records for fracking up".
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SPC George Rudenko
SPC George Rudenko
>1 y
Too many beurofracks
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Capt Seid Waddell
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They might be more effective contracting the services out to civilian hospitals.
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SPC George Rudenko
SPC George Rudenko
>1 y
I have that VA "insurance card" but I can't use it because there is a primary care clinic within 40 miles. I have 6 specialty clinics... all 120 miles away. So far, that card hasn't worked. :-(
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