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VA HEALTHCARE QUALITY: THE ROAD TO RECOVERY --
Despite the challenges of caring for the veterans
of today's
wars, the VA health system is getting high marks
for quality.

Story here...
http://www.ama-as
sn.org/amednews/2007/12/10/gvsa1210.htm
Story below:
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-------------------------
GOVERNMENT & MEDICINE
VA health care quality: The road to recovery
Despite the challenges of caring for the veterans
of today's wars, the VA health system is getting high marks for quality.
By David Glendinning
AMNews staff
"We are not your father's VA," Jonathan B. Perlin, MD, PhD, who until
recently headed the Dept. of Veterans Affairs health system, was fond of
saying about today's department.
For decades, the quality of care in the VA health system was considered
woefully sub-par. Enrollees complained of shoddy facilities, uncaring
medical professionals and neglectful treatment. Its reputation suffered
from such accounts as Oliver Stone's 1989 film "Born on the Fourth of
July," which depicted the paralyzed protagonist's VA hospital setting as
squalid and decaying.
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Veterans, physicians and other experts tell a
different story today. By many accounts, the quality-of-care picture at
the more than 150 hospitals and nearly 900 outpatient clinics has changed
dramatically since the mid-1990s. What was once the subject of
embarrassment and ridicule is now held up as a model for health systems.
With its new reputation for having some of the best treatment available
anywhere, the veterans system has been in high demand in recent years,
said Martin F. Conatser, American Legion national commander. This demand,
combined with the large influx of new Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, has
strained the system's capabilities and led to access problems for new
enrollees and long-time patients. "It's been a victim of its own success,"
Conatser said.
Investigators have found that veterans are having trouble enrolling in the
system and receiving timely care once they do. Veterans, physicians and
lawmakers have joined the chorus calling for major reforms to address an
antiquated disability assessment process, staffing shortages and
bureaucratic barriers to care.
But for those who can get it, the level of care can match or exceed most
anything veterans could receive in the private sector or elsewhere in the
government. A 2004 study by Steven M. Asch, MD, found that 12 VA health
care systems provided a higher level of care nearly across the board when
compared with patient care in 12 non-VA settings. Although no statistical
differences were found in acute care, VA patients received significantly
better chronic and preventive care than did non-VA patients, and better
care through the spectrum of treatment from diagnosis to follow-up. Dr.
Asch is a researcher with the VA Greater Los Angeles Health Care System.
Another study, led in 2003 by Ashish K. Jha, MD, MPH, an assistant
professor of health policy at the Harvard School of Public Health, found
that the VA reforms of the mid-1990s quickly improved quality. By 2000,
the veterans system was outperforming Medicare in 12 out of 13 process
measures after achieving double-digit percentage point gains in nearly
every category since 1995.
The VA takes pride not only in its basic care but also in providing a
level of specialized care that veterans cannot receive elsewhere. This
care is being tested as more veterans return from Iraq and Afghanistan
with complex injuries that would have killed most patients in prior
conflicts.
One way the department has adapted is by establishing polytrauma
rehabilitation centers. The four current centers, with a fifth under
construction, treat some of the most severely wounded veterans with the
aim of later transitioning them to one of 21 polytrauma network sites or
to other less intensive care settings closer to home. So far, the four
centers have treated nearly 400 severely wounded veterans from the wars,
with roughly two-thirds of the patients having massive injuries from
improvised explosive devices.
The great advantage of these centers is that they can take care of
patients' multiple severe injuries in a single setting, said Barbara
Sigford, MD, PhD, the Minneapolis Polytrauma Rehabilitation Center's
director.
A veteran with traumatic brain injury, burns and a broken back, for
instance, can receive top-notch, coordinated care for all three traumas
without ever having to travel to another facility, she said. The centers
employ the latest in rehabilitation technology. The department established
the centers in 2005 largely in response to the significant rates of
wounded returning with traumatic brain injuries. Before assuming their
current titles, all four facilities had been established as TBI lead
centers in 1992.
Patients give high marks to the care they receive at VA facilities, from
the vaunted polytrauma centers down to the smallest outpatient clinic.
In a survey released last year by the American Customer Satisfaction
Index, veterans rated their care 91 out of 100. The American Legion's
Conatser says his organization reviews care at many VA facilities every
year and consistently rates it as outstanding.
Continuing a quality tradition
VA physicians, administrators and other professionals have no intention of
resting on their laurels, said Barbara B. Fleming, MD, PhD, the VA's chief
quality and performance officer. They see their mission as continuing the
course toward even higher quality care that was charted in a radical
transformation more than a decade ago.
In 1994, Kenneth W. Kizer, MD, MPH, became the VA's top doctor and
promptly set to work fixing what many considered a badly broken system. An
emergency medicine physician who had received high marks for his work
overhauling California's health system as its top official, he helped set
into motion reforms that many experts credit with making the VA the
quality beacon it is today.
He moved the system away from its traditional focus on inpatient care. Dr.
Kizer established hundreds of outpatient clinics to provide most of
veterans' basic health care needs. Before 1994, only 10% of VA enrollees
had a primary care physician, Dr. Kizer said. By 1998, more than 80% did.
He also eliminated an organizational structure in which individual medical
centers essentially operated independently of each other. By organizing
the centers into 22 Veterans Integrated Service Networks that draft their
own budgets and compete with each other for funding, the VA introduced a
new culture based on quality improvement.
Since then, regional managers and medical professionals working under them
have been judged based on a set of clinical quality measures, the results
of which are publicized throughout the department. Doctors and others who
excel in certain areas receive bonuses, making the VA one of the first
health systems to use a pay-for-performance model.
To better coordinate care for a highly mobile patient population and to
measure quality, Dr. Kizer pushed the department to develop a universal
electronic medical record system, VistA. It is hailed as a model for
public and private health plans.
Not all of Dr. Kizer's reforms were initially embraced by VA physicians
and others, but they proved to be the right changes to make, he said. "I
said that if we couldn't show that it could be just as good or better than
the care in the private sector, then why should it exist? That wasn't
necessarily a popular thing to say at the time."
Today, most initial skeptics have come around to the reforms and helped
prove that they worked, said James P. Bagian, MD, VA chief patient safety
officer. The national patient safety center he directs, another legacy of
Dr. Kizer, has succeeded in doing what many thought impossible. VA
physicians, nurses and others voluntarily report medical errors or close
calls with the assurance that the information will be used to help prevent
future occurrences -- not to punish the medical professionals involved.
Challenges of a new war
The VA has stumbled on occasion, as the system deals with new wars and new
patients.
Despite having such resources as the polytrauma rehabilitation centers,
the VA is still working to ramp up the quality of its specialized
treatment for traumatic brain injury patients, amid criticism that it is
not as good as it should be.
Although the department is often well ahead of the curve on many clinical
issues, it did not predict at the start of the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan that it would be receiving so many TBI patients, said Margaret
E. O'Kane, president of the National Committee for Quality Assurance,
which ranks health plans based on quality measures.
"This issue kind of sneaked up on them, and they weren't prepared," she
said.
One VA report estimated that about 6% of returning Iraq and Afghanistan
veterans suffer from TBI, but veterans advocacy groups say that figure is
too low. Some estimates put the total portion of combat troops who will
sustain these brain injuries at as high as 20%, meaning some 300,000
veterans could end up experiencing the medical consequences. Although
military health officials estimate that about seven in 10 TBI cases are
mild and generally resolve on their own, the others could have lasting
effects.
Posttraumatic stress disorder and other mental health issues that
particularly affect veterans also are proving to be ongoing challenges for
the VA. The department reported that it has already treated more than
50,000 cases of PTSD from the wars, but veterans groups warned that the
actual number of those impacted is much higher.
The department recently made a concerted attempt to catch more cases by
ordering that all returning combat veterans be screened for PTSD, in
addition to TBI that might have escaped earlier detection. An Army report
released last month, however, finds that many cases of the disorder do not
emerge for three to six months after a veteran has returned from the war.
Last month, President Bush responded to the criticism by signing into law
a veterans suicide prevention bill that requires more mental health
training for VA staff and more counselors at department facilities.
The VA and the military have launched outreach efforts aimed at educating
private practice physicians on the need to conduct mental illness screens
on veterans who may have fallen through the cracks. The improvements have
not been good enough for some advocacy groups. Veterans for Common Sense
and Veterans United for Truth have filed a lawsuit against the department
on behalf of their members. It seeks damages for what they deem failure to
provide appropriate mental health care and disability payments. The groups
expect a decision in the case this spring.
The VA facilities are not in as good condition as they should be, Dr.
Kizer said. The average building is more than 50 years old, and some are
sorely in need of renovations or updates, he said. An internal
investigation of 1,400 VA facilities in March found that about 90% of the
roughly 1,000 problems identified were relatively minor, but the report
added that several of the more serious issues qualified as patient safety
concerns. Several mental health facilities, for instance, were found to
have bathroom fixtures that could make it easy for a patient to commit
suicide.
Patient care concerns also have surfaced. The VA has launched several
investigations into questionable patient outcomes. The latest one,
regarding a spike in surgical deaths earlier this year at Marion (Ill.) VA
Medical Center, is pending. The department has suspended three physicians'
privileges while it investigates.
When the VA encounters a situation that goes against its reputation for
the highest quality care, it moves quickly, said chief quality officer Dr.
Fleming. "When a problem is identified, the response is immediate."
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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