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VA SYSTEMS OUTAGE CRIPPLED WESTERN
HOSPITALS AND CLINICS -- Shut down critical
information
systems used to manage patient care at
facilities
scattered across more than a third of the
world.

For a previous story on this outage...go
here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/07/
nf07/nfOCT07/nf100307-1.htm
For more on the VA's VistA medical records
system, use the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/ses
search.php?q=VistA+CPRS&op=or
Story here...
http://www.govexec.com/
story_page.cfm?articleid=382
35&dcn=todaysnews
Story below:
-------------------------
August VA systems outage crippled western
hospitals, clinics
By Bob Brewin
bbrewin@govexec.com
A day-long system outage at a new Veterans Affairs Department data
processing center in northern California on Aug. 31 crippled critical
information systems used to manage patient care at VA hospitals and
clinics scattered across more than a third of the world, according to
details from an internal VA after-action report.
The outage at the VA's Sacramento, Calif., regional center was the
longest of 14 disruptions since that facility started hosting the suite
of clinical applications that make up the Veterans Health Information
System and Technology Architecture (VistA) earlier this year.
According to internal briefings, the Sacramento facility was created as
part of a move by the VA to shift VistA computer operations from 126
local sites to four regional centers.
Since April, problems at the Sacramento center resulted in VistA
downtime ranging from 15 minutes to the nine-hour outage on Aug. 31.
That event knocked out vital information systems at hospitals and
clinics operated by the Veterans Health Administration in Alaska,
northern California, Los Angeles, Hawaii, Guam, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon,
west Texas, American Samoa, the Philippines and Washington state.
The Sacramento failure first publicly surfaced at a hearing of the
Senate Veterans Affairs Committee on Sept. 19, when Robert Howard, the
VA's assistant secretary for information and technology, acknowledged it
in response to a question by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash. Howard
characterized the outage as a "big deal," but provided no details on its
scope, scale or impact on patient care.
But Dr. Ben Davoren, director of clinical informatics at the San
Francisco VA Medical Center, told a hearing of the House Veterans
Affairs Committee last week that the failure on Aug. 31 was "the most
significant technological threat to patient safety VA has ever had."
Dr. Bryan Volpp, associate chief of staff for clinical informatics at
the VA's Northern California Healthcare System, told the House that the
Aug. 31 outage all but sent VA hospitals and clinics in the western
United States back to the paper age.
The outage, Volpp testified, forced medical staff to shift from the use
of electronic medical records to writing notes and summaries on paper.
Outpatient surgery was delayed because clinicians could not access
forms, and doctors could not access electronic records for patients with
scheduled appointments. Patients discharged that day could not be
scheduled for follow-up appointments electronically.
Pharmacies at VA facilities connected to the Sacramento data center
sputtered to a halt, Volpp said, because labeling and automatic
dispensing equipment are controlled by VistA applications.
Paper records from Aug. 31 must be input into the electronic system by
hand, Volpp said, a process that will take months.
Both Volpp and Davoren testified that the outage hit 17 VA medical
facilities. But more than one VA medical staffer told Government
Executive that this figure understates the scope of the outage, because
the 17 are in turn electronically linked to numerous clinics and
outpatient facilities.
A VA source in Hawaii said the Honolulu VA medical center's information
systems were knocked out "because we use the Sacramento server, and Guam
was knocked out because it goes through us." The San Francisco VA
hospital, another source said, is electronically linked to multiple
clinics in its area, as are hospitals and clinics in the region
connected to the Sacramento data center.
While top VA information technology managers have touted the
establishment of regional data centers as a way to eliminate downtime,
insure continuity of operations and improve disaster recovery, Davoren
told the House hearing that the Aug. 31 outage indicated to him that the
regional model introduced a new single point of failure.
He testified that in case of an outage, the Sacramento data center was
supposed to "failover" to another regional center in Denver, but did
not. The after-action report did not address why this switchover did not
happen. Volpp testified that another backup system, a read-only backup
of patient data, was unavailable on Aug. 31 due to work by the
Sacramento center to recreate accounts holding the data.
The VA's plans to establish four regional data centers are part of an
overall effort to centralize IT resources and personnel to help
eliminate the computer security breaches that have plagued the VA over
the past year.
But Davoren told the House hearing that medical center employees
expressed concerns as early as 2005 that "the regionalization of IT
resources would create new points of failure that could not be
controlled by the sites experiencing the impact, and that the system
redundancy required to prevent this was never listed as a prerequisite
to centralization of critical patient care IT resources."
The VA did not immediately respond to queries from Government Executive
about the outages in Sacramento or how it intends to remedy the
situation. Howard, the VA IT director, told the Senate VA hearing on
Sept. 19 that the department intends to add "more robust backup
capability" to help mitigate system downtime at the regional data
centers.
Howard added that his staff is examining whether or not there is
something about the VistA software itself -- developed over years and
hosted at the local medical facility level -- that does not lend itself
to hosting at a regional data center. Until that process is completed,
Howard said the VA will cease any further migration of VistA
applications to regional data centers.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --