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VA STUDY: TIME WAITING FOR HEALTHCARE LINKED TO
MORTALITY -- Patients with average
waits of thirty-one
days or more were 20 percent more likely
to die in a six month follow-up period.

Every veteran on a VA waiting list
already knows this!
I hope the VA puts their own research to
good use.
Proper funding will put an end to waiting
lists for VA healthcare.
Story here...
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/
medicalnews.php?newsid=66686
Story below:
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VA Study Finds Time Waiting For Health Care
Linked To Mortality
A new study in the latest issue of Health Services Research is the first
to measure a relationship between waiting for healthcare and mortality
rates - especially in the elderly.
Waiting times throughout the US healthcare system have been increasing.
The study found that while waiting less than thirty-one days does not
have a detectable effect on mortality, waiting beyond that increases the
mortality risk. It also shows that keeping waiting times for elderly
patients under thirty-one days improves health outcomes.
"Patients who used medical facilities with average waits of thirty-one
days or more were 20% more likely to die in a six month follow-up period
compared to those using facilities with shorter waits," says author
Julia Prentice.
It is important for health system managers to monitor how long patients
wait for care as a quality control measure. The Department of Veterans
Affairs is one of the few U.S. healthcare organizations that
systematically tracks and manages wait times. Other American health
systems should follow the VA's lead in this area.
Health Services Research (HSR) provides those engaged in research,
public policy formulation, and health services management with the
latest findings, methods, and thinking on important policy and practice
issues. Providing a forum for the expansion of knowledge of the
financing, organization, delivery, and outcomes of health services, HSR
also allows practitioners and students alike to exchange ideas that will
help to improve the health of individuals and communities.
Julia Prentice, Ph.D., is a Health Scientist at the Health Care
Financing and Economics research group located at the Boston VA Health
Care System. She received her doctorate in Community Health Sciences in
2004 from UCLA. During her time at UCLA and as a postdoctoral scholar at
the Center for Health Quality, Outcomes, and Economic Research at the
Bedford VA, Dr. Prentice pursued a variety of research topics
investigating the relationship between access to health care and health
outcomes.
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Larry Scott --