Menu
Log in
Log in

A new rating system now restricts the types of surgery performed at certain Veterans Affairs facilities in five states.

  • Thursday, June 17, 2010 07:54
    Message # 360188
    Deleted user
     
    Senator Richard Durbin 
meets with Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki
    Enlarge Evan Vucci/AP

    Illinois Sen. Richard Durbin (left) and VA Secretary Eric Shinseki discuss a report about the VA facility in Marion, Ill., in December. Surgical mistakes at that facility led to nine deaths and prompted a recent policy that ranks facilities' ability to perform different types of surgery. Veterans at smaller and more rural facilities may now have to travel farther to get more complex surgeries.

    Senator Richard Durbin meets with Veterans Affairs 
Secretary Eric Shinseki
    Evan Vucci/AP

    Illinois Sen. Richard Durbin (left) and VA Secretary Eric Shinseki discuss a report about the VA facility in Marion, Ill., in December. Surgical mistakes at that facility led to nine deaths and prompted a recent policy that ranks facilities' ability to perform different types of surgery. Veterans at smaller and more rural facilities may now have to travel farther to get more complex surgeries.

    text size A A A
    June 17, 2010 from WUNC

    A new rating system now restricts the types of surgery performed at certain Veterans Affairs facilities in five states. The new policy will prompt some veterans to travel farther to reach other VA facilities or civilian hospitals for more complex surgeries. The policy comes after investigations found that surgical mistakes had caused nine deaths in the department's Marion, Ill., hospital a few years ago.

    Under the new policy, the VA's 112 hospitals are now ranked according to whether they are able to perform standard, intermediate or complex surgical operations. The VA hospital in Fayetteville, N.C., is one of five facilities restricted to standard surgery only.

    At first glance, the Fayetteville building looks more like a hotel than a hospital. Dedicated in 1939, the building stands out with its red brick facade and shiny brass front doors. But most patients these days come in through a modern side entry.

    "This is our ambulatory entrance, and this is where the majority of our patients come in to get checked in for their outpatient visits," says the hospital's interim director, Ralph Gigliotti.

    Inside, a long line of veterans winds its way through a cramped waiting room and all the way to the door. Under the VA's new guidelines, Gigliotti says, doctors here will no longer perform complex or intermediate procedures like joint replacements and stomach resections. This hospital doesn't have a bad reputation, but like other rural facilities, it has always struggled to recruit enough specialists.

    "What we learned from Marion was you had to ensure that the infrastructure you have in place at your facility can support the services that you're offering — the equipment, the personnel, those type of things," Gigliotti says.

    What we learned from [the deaths at the facility in] Marion was you had to ensure that the infrastructure you have in place at your facility can support the services that you're offering — the equipment, the personnel, those type of things.

    The new restrictions on the Fayetteville facility do not bother Wally Tyson, the national vice chairman of Disabled American Veterans. Tyson, who visited the hospital recently for a checkup, says very few complex procedures were performed here anyway.

    "You know, it's not really a downgrade. Using 2009 as a reference, less than 4 percent of the surgeries performed at Fayetteville would have been affected by any of the change that had been done; 4 percent — that's very minor," Tyson says.

    But that percentage is important to VA officials, who want to make sure the right surgeon performs the correct procedure in the optimal setting.

    "It's not rational to think that we need heart surgery in every facility. But we do need to be able to provide at least standard level care in every facility," says the VA's national director of surgery, Dr. William Gunnar.

    Gunnar says it's safer and more efficient to send patients at smaller and more rural hospitals elsewhere for complicated operations.

    "Having said that, you can do a lot of surgery in a standard facility," Gunnar says. "You know, you have anesthesia support, you have a general surgeon, a urologist, you may or may not have an orthopedic surgeon — and that's the core group of people, and you can do a lot surgery and a lot of good for veterans in that rural community."

    Gunnar says the mistake in Marion, Ill., was that one or two surgeons performed procedures they were not equipped to handle.

    Robert Shelly, 43, doesn't mind the extra travel time to visit a facility that is fully outfitted. He's a former Marine with a bad back who relies on the VA for medical care.

    "Things do happen in hospitals. It's a gamble sometimes, but going to see a specialist and you know this is what this guy does every day of the week, I'd rather go see him than anybody else," Shelly says.

    Shelly says traveling farther is worth it to get the specialist he needs.

DOD Welcome home-small.jpg A welcoming home for our Troops.

Welcoming home our men and women doesn't end after the crowd disperses, it MUST continue on for the life of the Veteran! They've served us, now we will serve them with programs that work so they reintegrate into society.

We are a national public benefit nonprofit organization that educates American Communities about best practices to serve Veterans.  We honor their service by empowering Veterans to apply their training and skills to successfully transition to productive careers and enterprises.

We provide free vocational training 24/7 to all of our members through our website, in addition to local events.  We believe the tenet that American Communities are the ultimate beneficiaries when Veterans claim their benefits and invest in productive endeavors.

The SWVBRC enlists the support of members of local Communities like you to increase Veteran awareness of the value of obtaining a VA card and receiving earned benefits.

Sponsorships, donations, volunteers and support from communities like yours enable us to reach out to Veterans and empower them to transition back into successful, productive enterprises that ultimately benefit all Americans and support future generations.

The Internal Revenue Service has determined that Southwest Veterans' Business Resource Center, Inc. is an organization exempt from federal income tax under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. A donation to SWVBRC, Inc. is deductible to the extent permitted under law.

© 2008 - 2022 Southwest Veterans' Business Resource Center, Inc.

 Privacy Policy

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work is posted under fair use without profit or payment as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and/or research.

Contact Us
Designed by The ARRC® & Powered by Wild Apricot.

Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software