| VETS HOPE FOR REAL
ANSWERS ON VA'S CONTAMINATED EQUIPMENT
"I don't know if there is anything
they could say that would make me happy, not after they did
something like this."
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... Expect SPIN from the VA! It will be apologetic SPIN, but
SPIN nonetheless. What can they possibly say or do to make
it right to 53 infected veterans.
Complete coverage of
VA's contaminated equipment is here. Although the
hearing will not be webcast ( audio feed only ), television
cameras will be allowed in the hearing room.
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VA patients hope for real answers
Congress to address contamination at hospitals
By Clay Carey | THE TENNESSEAN
and Bill Theobald | TENNESSEAN WASHINGTON BUREAU
Walter McRae wants to hear the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
tell him it is sorry.
He wants its highest-ranking officials to say they're doing
something to make sure veterans who turn to the government for
medical treatment aren't being exposed to dirty equipment, the way
he may have been six years ago.
And he wants to know that those problems aren't going to make him
sick someday.
McRae and other veterans may begin getting some answers Tuesday,
when a congressional committee finds out what VA investigators
have learned since the chilling discovery of problems with
endoscopic exams at Murfreesboro's Alvin C. York Medical Center
and other agency hospitals.
In February, the VA advised thousands of patients to get blood
tests after it discovered that valves on colonoscopy tubes used at
the Murfreesboro hospital weren't working correctly, possibly
exposing patients to other people's bodily fluids. Since then, at
least 28 patients have tested positive for hepatitis or HIV.
Officials with the VA would not comment on the upcoming hearing.
Some in Congress and in veterans groups have been supportive of
how the agency has handled the problem, while others have
criticized the VA for not being open enough about its
investigation.
The VA has said the chances of catching diseases because of the
colonoscopy problems are slim, and it has insisted that there's no
way to know whether the patients contracted those illnesses at the
hospital.
Thirteen VA officials are scheduled to testify Tuesday — including
Juan Morales, director of the Tennessee Valley Healthcare System,
which operates the Murfreesboro and Nashville VA hospitals along
with 11 clinics in Middle and East Tennessee and southern
Kentucky.
"I don't know if there is anything they could say that would make
me happy, not after they did something like this," said McRae, a
64-year-old former Marine from Old Hickory.
McRae's tests came back negative. Fellow Vietnam veteran Thomas
Mayo wasn't so lucky.
When Mayo got his test results back in February, he learned he had
Hepatitis C, a blood-borne liver disease.
He got a colonoscopy at Murfreesboro's VA hospital in late 2006.
The Chattanooga resident insists there's no other way he could
have caught the virus.
"There's nothing they can say," said Mayo, 58. "They've given me
something that may kill me. They didn't do it intentionally, but
they should have done better than they have."
Procedures
criticized
U.S. Rep. Phil Roe, a Knoxville obstetrician-gynecologist and the
top Republican on the House Veterans Affairs subcommittee on
oversight and investigations, believes health-care workers at VA
facilities in Murfreesboro and in Georgia and Florida failed to
follow rules for servicing and cleaning the devices, which are
used to examine the colon, nose and throat.
At big institutions, people do things a particular way and train
the next person to do it the same way, Roe said.
"That's why protocols are important," he said. "Those procedures
have to be ironclad."
The first group of VA witnesses scheduled to testify Tuesday are
from the agency's inspector general's office. They are expected to
reveal what they discovered during an investigation requested by
Congress.
Roe said he has not yet seen the IG's report. He hopes to learn
not only how the scopes were handled improperly but who is
responsible and what is being done to prevent problems in the
future.
A total of 6,805 veterans who had colonoscopies at the
Murfreesboro hospital over the previous five years were notified.
Of the 5,215 tested, seven were found to have Hepatitis B, 20 had
Hepatitis C, and one was carrying HIV.
Testing expanded
The discovery in Murfreesboro prompted the VA to review the use of
its endoscopes around the country. It discovered problems with how
the devices were cleaned at the Charlie Norwood Medical Center in
Augusta, Ga., and the Bruce Carter Medical Center in Miami.
Tests of nearly 3,000 additional veterans found 20 cases of
hepatitis and five who tested positive for HIV.
Rep. Bart Gordon, D-Murfreesboro, is not a member of the Veterans
Affairs Committee but has been given permission to sit in on the
hearing. He agrees with Roe that it will be difficult to determine
whether the infections were caused by the mishandling of the
equipment, but he wants the sick veterans to get help.
"I hope that VA officials will address possible plans to help
infected veterans pay for needed treatment in full," Gordon said
in a written statement. "At this point, my hope is that the VA
will give infected veterans the benefit of the doubt and not
require these veterans to pay co-pays for their treatment."
Roe, Gordon, and Steve Robertson, legislative director of the
American Legion, all said they were generally satisfied with the
way the VA handled the problems once they were discovered.
"We applaud the VA for its openness," Robertson said. He described
the incidents as a "hiccup" in a system lauded as a model for the
country.
Others are more critical about the way the VA has handled the
problem and communicated with patients.
Prior infections alleged
Rudolph Cumberbatch, a former chief of surgery at the York
hospital, has questioned why the VA decided to not re-examine
tests that were done before April 2003.
"Many patients (may) already have Hepatitis C, Hepatitis B or HIV
(before the colonoscopy)," said Cumberbatch, who worked at the
Murfreesboro hospital from 2001 to 2005. He insisted that none of
the problems could have happened on his watch.
VA officials did not respond to questions about his claims.
Veteran Larry Scott is founder and editor of VAwatchdog.org, a Web
site that focuses on veterans' health care, benefits and other
issues.
Scott believes the VA should do more to prove that equipment is
being cleaned properly at all of its hospitals, and it should be
more open about what inspections at other medical centers have
found.
That sort of openness would be a welcome change, said David
Bartlett, senior vice president of Levick Strategic
Communications, a crisis management and communications strategy
firm in Washington.
"What's being done to fix a problem is much more important in the
public's mind than what happened," Bartlett said. "I can't imagine
they aren't doing a lot of things, but you'd never know it from
the communication that is going out."
At Tuesday's hearing, the VA has an opportunity to start righting
some of those wrongs, Bartlett said.
"The last thing they should do is be defensive. The last thing
they should (do) is minimize the problem. … For anybody that feels
their life is at risk, it is anything but a small problem."
Vet switches hospitals
R.J. Simmons, an Army veteran from Tullahoma, got a colonoscopy at
York in early 2006. He tested negative for HIV and hepatitis
earlier this year.
Since the concerns became public, Simmons abandoned York in favor
of the VA hospital in Nashville. He worries that similar problems
may arise there, but he has few other options for medical
treatment — at 63, he's not old enough for Medicare, and he can't
afford private insurance.
"VA's all I got," Simmons said. "I put my trust in them. Then when
something like this happens, it's devastating.
Mayo, the veteran who tested positive for Hepatitis C, just hopes
the VA solves the problem. Last month, the hospital sent him a
letter suggesting another colonoscopy. He threw it in the trash.
"I hope they don't cause this heartache on nobody else," Mayo
said. "Veterans deserve to be treated better. The hospital needs
to crack down on whatever it takes to not let this happen again."
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
contaminated equipment, endoscopic, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, HIV
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