Posted on Jul 23, 2016
Advice From the Big Guy - A Military Disability Blog: The Commission on Care Final Report—The...
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SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL I have added my thoughts in [brackets].
Commission on Care recommendations to improve VA:
#1: The VHA Care System. This proposed system would create area-specific networks of both VA and VA-approved civilian healthcare providers. Veterans would have the ability to choose their primary care providers from anyone within the network, who would then be in charge of referrals to specialists. [If the Affordable care Act is overturned this process might be possible.]
#2: Improve VHA staffing. The Commission determined that a huge part of the current problems at VA facilities is due to insufficient staffing.
#3: Clinical appeals. The VHA currently doesn’t have a single set system in place in regard to clinical appeals, so resolving disputes regarding a patient’s care is difficult, to say the least. The Commission recommends that the VHA adopt a clinical appeals process similar to ones used by private health insurance companies. [the VA appeals court system is methodical. Expanding the system to provide for appeals process to resolve Clinical appeals process more efficient would be challenging but beneficial.]
#4: The Commission recommends that the VA create a “culture to inspire and support continuous improvement” to the VHA system. To do this, the VA would use the Veterans Engineering Resource Center to more effectively share best-practice ideas throughout the VHA system. Reengineering centers would also be used to identify problem areas and offer support to fix them. [creating an agency subculture which is free from attachments is generally impossible.]
#5: Eliminate any disparity in health care among vets. The Commission notes that there is data that shows inequalities in the care minority and vulnerable veterans receive. The Commission calls for proper funds and support to be given to the Office of Health Equity in order for them to fully implement programs to eradicate such inequalities. [while this is a noble goal, trying to make a color-blind system where each and every veteran is treated equally independent of background, symptoms, prognosis, etc. is probably too hard to reach. Incremental improvement is very doable.]
#6: After establishing the VHA Care System, the Commission recommends giving the governing board of the system the power and freedom to fully control all decisions regarding facilities and assets. This would allow them to close facilities that are not beneficial to the veterans and then reassign those assets to areas in which the veterans’ needs are not being met.
#7: Modernize the VA’s computer systems to a single, all-inclusive program that will streamline information sharing with all levels of the VHA and the veterans. This single system would oversee every aspect of a patient’s care, from billing and scheduling, to test results and data sharing.
#8: Completely reorganize the supply chain management to enable money-saving practices by eradicating bureaucratic involvement in purchasing requirements and procedures. The Commission believes that by properly reorganizing the supply chain management, the VA could save hundreds of millions of dollars. [the current medical system is compartmentalized which is more secure yet makes life challenging. Medical records, prescriptions, etc. are segregated by VAMC. While cumbersome this is mores secure than a globally accessible system within the VA. There have been too many data breaches already.]
#9: Establish a board of directors that would take over the governance of the VHA. The Commission states that the current politically appointed leadership is extremely weak for numerous reasons, including their short terms and their need to please too many stakeholders. [we do not need additional bureaucracy in the VA. The current board is the US Congress and more specifically those committees which focus on the VA and the veterans they treat. ]
#10: Create a strategy to fix the working culture of the VHA to better align staff and leadership with a single mission. The Commission noted that the VA has the lowest organizational health in government. The idea is that by having all leaders uphold and promote a specific cultural concept, employee morale will increase significantly, thus improving job performance.
#11: Create a model for the leadership pipeline that will enable the VHA to properly prepare and promote strong leaders throughout the organization. This model would reflect many of the successful models used in the private sector, and it would allow employees to have clear indicators of the qualities necessary for each leadership level and how to develop them. The model would also guide those in leadership positions to help them fully fulfil their leadership potential. Finally, the Commission recommends that Congress provide more opportunities to recruit strong and experienced leaders from the private sector.
#12: Reorganize the management processes in order to empower local leadership and eliminate waste and redundancy. The Commission points out that the responsibilities of current leadership roles are vaguely defined, creating confusion, waste, and a lack of power to properly lead and make changes. To fix it, they propose redesigning the leadership structure to create clearly defined roles and responsibilities. In addition, they propose giving the lowest leadership levels the means of decision-making so that they have the power to actually get things done. [laudable goal which would be great of it is expanded to the regional leadership and management.]
#13: Create a model identical to those used in the private sector to measure personnel performance. Leaders will be given the power to ensure that their employees perform within the expectations, with the focus on long-term morale and overall wellbeing, not just short-term results. The VHA will “recognize meaningful distinctions in performance with meaningful awards.”
#14: Ensure that all leadership, staff, and employees (including civilian providers in the network) are thoroughly trained to understand the military and cultural-specific needs of the veterans they serve. [
Recommendation [the VA should focus on treating veterans as they themselves would like to be treated - Golden Rule.]
#15: Completely rewrite the laws governing the personnel system to create an employment system similar to the private sector in recruitment, benefits, compensation, regulations, promotions, disciplinary processes, leave, training, and more. [unrealistic expectation - rewriting Federal laws which will pass judicial review is a long-term process]
#16: Create a system to ensure that these HR changes are put into effect and remain beneficial. This recommendation would create a Chief Talent Leader position at the executive level of the VHA who would be in charge of transforming and managing the HR enterprise, with the proper funding to ensure consistency throughout the system.
#17: Extend healthcare eligibility to those with other than honorable (OTH) discharges with extenuating circumstances. [may make sense for those with extenuating circumstances such as PTSD]
#18: Create a group of experts whose purpose is to re-evaluate and reformat the VA’s eligibility design for benefits. This group would be given the funding necessary to fulfil their purpose. [Congress would need to charter this group because Congress is responsible for the authorization and appropriation bills for the VA.]
COL Mikel J. Burroughs LTC Stephen C. LTC Thomas Tennant MAJ Ken LandgrenCapt Seid Waddell CW5 (Join to see) SMSgt Minister Gerald A. Thomas SGM David W. Carr LOM, DMSM MP SGT1stSgt Eugene HarlessSFC William FarrellSSG Leo Bell SSgt (Join to see) Sgt Joe LaBranche SGT (Join to see) SGT Forrest Stewart SrA Christopher Wright PO3 Steven Sherrill PO1 John Miller Kim Bolen RN CCM ACM
Commission on Care recommendations to improve VA:
#1: The VHA Care System. This proposed system would create area-specific networks of both VA and VA-approved civilian healthcare providers. Veterans would have the ability to choose their primary care providers from anyone within the network, who would then be in charge of referrals to specialists. [If the Affordable care Act is overturned this process might be possible.]
#2: Improve VHA staffing. The Commission determined that a huge part of the current problems at VA facilities is due to insufficient staffing.
#3: Clinical appeals. The VHA currently doesn’t have a single set system in place in regard to clinical appeals, so resolving disputes regarding a patient’s care is difficult, to say the least. The Commission recommends that the VHA adopt a clinical appeals process similar to ones used by private health insurance companies. [the VA appeals court system is methodical. Expanding the system to provide for appeals process to resolve Clinical appeals process more efficient would be challenging but beneficial.]
#4: The Commission recommends that the VA create a “culture to inspire and support continuous improvement” to the VHA system. To do this, the VA would use the Veterans Engineering Resource Center to more effectively share best-practice ideas throughout the VHA system. Reengineering centers would also be used to identify problem areas and offer support to fix them. [creating an agency subculture which is free from attachments is generally impossible.]
#5: Eliminate any disparity in health care among vets. The Commission notes that there is data that shows inequalities in the care minority and vulnerable veterans receive. The Commission calls for proper funds and support to be given to the Office of Health Equity in order for them to fully implement programs to eradicate such inequalities. [while this is a noble goal, trying to make a color-blind system where each and every veteran is treated equally independent of background, symptoms, prognosis, etc. is probably too hard to reach. Incremental improvement is very doable.]
#6: After establishing the VHA Care System, the Commission recommends giving the governing board of the system the power and freedom to fully control all decisions regarding facilities and assets. This would allow them to close facilities that are not beneficial to the veterans and then reassign those assets to areas in which the veterans’ needs are not being met.
#7: Modernize the VA’s computer systems to a single, all-inclusive program that will streamline information sharing with all levels of the VHA and the veterans. This single system would oversee every aspect of a patient’s care, from billing and scheduling, to test results and data sharing.
#8: Completely reorganize the supply chain management to enable money-saving practices by eradicating bureaucratic involvement in purchasing requirements and procedures. The Commission believes that by properly reorganizing the supply chain management, the VA could save hundreds of millions of dollars. [the current medical system is compartmentalized which is more secure yet makes life challenging. Medical records, prescriptions, etc. are segregated by VAMC. While cumbersome this is mores secure than a globally accessible system within the VA. There have been too many data breaches already.]
#9: Establish a board of directors that would take over the governance of the VHA. The Commission states that the current politically appointed leadership is extremely weak for numerous reasons, including their short terms and their need to please too many stakeholders. [we do not need additional bureaucracy in the VA. The current board is the US Congress and more specifically those committees which focus on the VA and the veterans they treat. ]
#10: Create a strategy to fix the working culture of the VHA to better align staff and leadership with a single mission. The Commission noted that the VA has the lowest organizational health in government. The idea is that by having all leaders uphold and promote a specific cultural concept, employee morale will increase significantly, thus improving job performance.
#11: Create a model for the leadership pipeline that will enable the VHA to properly prepare and promote strong leaders throughout the organization. This model would reflect many of the successful models used in the private sector, and it would allow employees to have clear indicators of the qualities necessary for each leadership level and how to develop them. The model would also guide those in leadership positions to help them fully fulfil their leadership potential. Finally, the Commission recommends that Congress provide more opportunities to recruit strong and experienced leaders from the private sector.
#12: Reorganize the management processes in order to empower local leadership and eliminate waste and redundancy. The Commission points out that the responsibilities of current leadership roles are vaguely defined, creating confusion, waste, and a lack of power to properly lead and make changes. To fix it, they propose redesigning the leadership structure to create clearly defined roles and responsibilities. In addition, they propose giving the lowest leadership levels the means of decision-making so that they have the power to actually get things done. [laudable goal which would be great of it is expanded to the regional leadership and management.]
#13: Create a model identical to those used in the private sector to measure personnel performance. Leaders will be given the power to ensure that their employees perform within the expectations, with the focus on long-term morale and overall wellbeing, not just short-term results. The VHA will “recognize meaningful distinctions in performance with meaningful awards.”
#14: Ensure that all leadership, staff, and employees (including civilian providers in the network) are thoroughly trained to understand the military and cultural-specific needs of the veterans they serve. [
Recommendation [the VA should focus on treating veterans as they themselves would like to be treated - Golden Rule.]
#15: Completely rewrite the laws governing the personnel system to create an employment system similar to the private sector in recruitment, benefits, compensation, regulations, promotions, disciplinary processes, leave, training, and more. [unrealistic expectation - rewriting Federal laws which will pass judicial review is a long-term process]
#16: Create a system to ensure that these HR changes are put into effect and remain beneficial. This recommendation would create a Chief Talent Leader position at the executive level of the VHA who would be in charge of transforming and managing the HR enterprise, with the proper funding to ensure consistency throughout the system.
#17: Extend healthcare eligibility to those with other than honorable (OTH) discharges with extenuating circumstances. [may make sense for those with extenuating circumstances such as PTSD]
#18: Create a group of experts whose purpose is to re-evaluate and reformat the VA’s eligibility design for benefits. This group would be given the funding necessary to fulfil their purpose. [Congress would need to charter this group because Congress is responsible for the authorization and appropriation bills for the VA.]
COL Mikel J. Burroughs LTC Stephen C. LTC Thomas Tennant MAJ Ken LandgrenCapt Seid Waddell CW5 (Join to see) SMSgt Minister Gerald A. Thomas SGM David W. Carr LOM, DMSM MP SGT1stSgt Eugene HarlessSFC William FarrellSSG Leo Bell SSgt (Join to see) Sgt Joe LaBranche SGT (Join to see) SGT Forrest Stewart SrA Christopher Wright PO3 Steven Sherrill PO1 John Miller Kim Bolen RN CCM ACM
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PO1 John Miller
LTC Stephen F.
On point #2, I'd like to add a few caveats. Make it easier to hire VHA staff by ensuring that funding is in place prior to interviewing for the position, and streamline the process in other ways so that once a hiring decision is made, the person hired can get to work faster.
Also, improve the pay for non-medical VHA staff. Yes they're not in it for the money. But look at the pay scale a person is at and compare it to the pay for an equivalent position in the civilian/private sector and see who makes more.
On point #2, I'd like to add a few caveats. Make it easier to hire VHA staff by ensuring that funding is in place prior to interviewing for the position, and streamline the process in other ways so that once a hiring decision is made, the person hired can get to work faster.
Also, improve the pay for non-medical VHA staff. Yes they're not in it for the money. But look at the pay scale a person is at and compare it to the pay for an equivalent position in the civilian/private sector and see who makes more.
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