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FORT WAYNE VA HOSPITAL STOPS MAJOR SURGERIES
PENDING REVIEW -- The VA said that the "pause in
complex
abdominal surgeries is expected to continue for a
few more
months" while plans for improvement are
implemented.

Fort Wayne VA
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Story here...
http://www.journalgazette.net/apps/p
bcs.dll/article?AID=/20071209/LOCAL/712090369/1002/LOCAL
Story below:
-------------------------
VA hospital stops major surgeries pending review
By Michael Schroeder
The Journal Gazette
Fort Wayne’s VA Medical Center has temporarily halted all complex
abdominal surgeries, including colon and gallbladder surgeries, pending a
review of its surgical program.
On Wednesday, a three-person team from the Office of the Medical Inspector
arrived at the hospital. The three left Friday morning after talking with
staff and hospital administrators about issues that led the VA Hospital on
Oct. 15 to put a hold on certain major surgeries.
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The Office of the Medical Inspector, part of the
Department of Veterans Affairs, independently investigates health care
issues raised by veterans and other stakeholders, according to its Web
site. Representatives from the office don’t do media interviews, but VA
officials say the visit follows an internal review of processes and
systems and an outside peer review of care in the surgical program.
“Pending release of the team’s final report, its preliminary report
concluded that the (VA Northern Indiana Healthcare System’s) processes for
reviewing concerns and incidents were in good order, that specific recent
reviews produced accurate reports, and that proposed improvement plans
were appropriate,” the VA Medical Center said Friday in a statement.
“These plans focus on communication among team members and across
disciplines.”
A patient’s death in August prompted the initial internal review, said
Cathi Spivey-Paul, director of the hospital. Apart from the date of death
– Aug. 21 – she didn’t provide any information about the surgical patient
or specific circumstances surrounding that person’s death.
The death triggered an automatic peer review done by a surgeon outside the
VA Medical Center. That review found that most experienced, competent
practitioners might have managed the case differently in one or more
aspects, Spivey-Paul said. But it didn’t determine that the surgeon
involved – whom she didn’t name – provided inappropriate care, she said.
VA officials didn’t provide specific figures but said that surgical
department morbidity and mortality rates are within the normal expected
range, which accounts for factors such as patient age and condition. The
department rates – not broken down by doctor – include surgeries done by
chief of surgery Dr. Charles Gardner, who joined the hospital in November
2006, and Dr. Timothy Pelfrey, a surgeon hired in January. The two are the
only physicians who were performing complex abdominal surgeries at the VA
Hospital.
Spivey-Paul said she expects that Gardner and Pelfrey will return to
performing complex abdominal surgeries in the future and says she’s
looking forward to infrastructure improvements at the hospital.
After the surgical patient death in August, outside consultants – a
general surgeon and an operating room nurse manager – were also brought in
to determine what improvements are needed.
Their recommendations, which were consistent with internal findings,
included increasing nursing staff in the recovery area, intensive care
unit and for outpatient procedures.
After signing off on the recommendations, Spivey-Paul halted complex
abdominal surgeries in mid-October to provide time for “rebuilding” the
department, she said. For the previous 10 months, about four or five of
those operations were performed per month.
The hospital plans to add equipment and staff to address issues, but it
hasn’t yet determined when it will resume performing those surgeries.
In a statement Friday, the VA said that the “pause in complex abdominal
surgeries is expected to continue for a few more months” while plans for
improvement are implemented.
Since January, the hospital has spent nearly $600,000 on new equipment for
its surgery programs, with a laparoscope one of its priciest purchases.
Its most pressing staffing need is anesthesiology support, officials say.
In the meantime, patients requiring operations not offered by the hospital
will be referred to another VA facility or a local hospital. The continuum
of care won’t stop because certain services are on hold, Spivey-Paul said.
“The VA will take care of … individual patient needs.”
----------
VA Medical Center statement
As part of an ongoing review of the (Fort Wayne VA Medical Center’s)
surgery program, a very experienced inspection team from the (Department
of Veterans Affairs) Office of the Medical Inspector spent 1 1/2 days
talking to program staff and reviewing records and procedures. The team
consisted of a nurse-attorney, a physician and a surgeon.
Pending release of the team’s final report, its preliminary report
concluded that the (VA Northern Indiana Healthcare System’s) processes for
reviewing concerns and incidents were in good order, that specific recent
reviews produced accurate reports, and that proposed improvement plans
were appropriate. These plans focus on communication among team members
and across disciplines.
The pause in complex abdominal surgeries is expected to continue for a few
more months while these plans are being put in place. Other surgeries and
procedures will continue to be performed as usual. (VA Hospital) Director
Cathi Spivey-Paul states that the team recognized the complex nature of
the surgeries that have been paused, especially colorectal surgeries, and
that the outcomes produced by the (VA Hospital’s) surgical program are
completely within accepted standards of practice.
Source: Tim Twiss, public affairs officer, VA Hospital
-------------------------
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