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EDITORIAL CALLS FOR PRIVATIZING VA HEALTHCARE BY
GIVING VETS MEDICAID-LIKE PLAN -- The
Washington
Times says president Bush should stop the
spread
of government-run healthcare, as in the VA.

Read the editorial carefully.
What is being proposed is a Medicaid-like budget
for veterans. A vet would be given so much money, a budget, and told
to get his own healthcare. If there's not enough money, then the vet
does without.
This is just another attempt to privatize and
then do away with the VA.
For more about privatizing the VA, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.
org/sessearch.php?q=privatize+privatizing&op=or
Story here...
http://washingtontimes.co
m/article/20071218/EDITORIAL/800572185/1013
Story below:
-------------------------
VA health care
By Robert Goldberg
Less than a year ago, Paul Krugman wrote a column
in the New York Times that held up the Department of Veterans Affairs
health system as a model for single-payer health care. His main point was
that far from caring about profits, the VA was a better system because it
cared only about patients, the veterans of America:
"The key to the VA's success is its long-term relationship with its
clients: veterans, once in the VA system, normally stay in it for life.
This means that the VA can... make much better use of information
technology than other health care providers... which reduces both costs
and medical errors. The long-term relationship... also lets the VA save
money by investing heavily in preventive medicine, an area in which the
private sector — which makes money by treating the sick, not by keeping
people healthy — has shown little interest. The result is a system that
achieves higher customer satisfaction than the private sector, higher
quality of care by a number of measures and lower mortality rates — at
much lower cost per patient."
Article continues below:
"ASK
THE BUILDER" VIDEOS -- HOME IMPROVEMENT TIPS
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Let's ignore the fact that Mr. Krugman is both
wrong about the lower mortality rates and fudges 10-year-old data to make
his case. Ideologues that want to use the VA as example of what socialized
medicine can deliver should judge the VA in terms of what the system was
created for in the first place: caring for wounded warriors returning from
the battlefield.
Mr. Krugman would have plenty of more recent evidence for doing so. Here's
Donna Shalala, co-chairman of the federal task force reviewing care for
Iraq vets who suffer from brain injuries, amputations and post traumatic
stress disorder: "Without designated care coordinators to plan the best
treatment path for new patients, an untold number ended up lost."
In addition, injured combatants must go through two antiquated disability
assessments (one by the military and one by the VA) to determine what
treatment options are available. This means that many are forced to jump
through bureaucratic hoops that might not even get them to the right
place, Miss Shalala said. "For veterans' families to give up everything
just to coordinate this care themselves is fundamentally unfair," she
said. "The process is too old-fashioned. It has nothing to do with modern
medicine, and we ought to be embarrassed."
Mr. Krugman should ask Sarah Wade about the long-term relationship the VA
provides returning vets. According to USA Today, Mrs. Wade, who lives in
Chapel Hill, N.C., with her husband, said their problems with the VA
started after Ted Wade left the VA center in Richmond, which offers
specialized care for severe and multiple injuries. She has been acting as
her husband's case manager since the VA manager didn't know enough about
his injuries.
"One of the things with the VA is that they can always tell you what they
can't do, but they can never tell you what they can do," she said, citing
the time his private rehabilitation benefits ran out. "When his contract
was up, they (VA) tried to put him in an adult day care program and
transfer his medical care back in-house. They had no one who has the
expertise to treat him there, otherwise he wouldn't have been sent to this
doctor in the first place."
Mr. Krugman's response will likely be to blame President Bush for not
spending more. That won't wash. Spending on the VA has doubled under the
Bush administration. And spending more, as the United Kingdom and Canada
health systems have shown, doesn't reduce waiting or ensure that doctors
can actually practice effective medicine instead of guideline-driven
drivel like limiting therapy for combat veterans suffering from
post-traumatic stress disorder to three months.
Vets should have a choice about where to get the care the VA has denied
them by indifference, by delay and by delivery of one-size-fits-all
medicine. Medicaid already has a successful program called Cash and
Counseling where families and individuals with disabilities are given the
option to manage a flexible budget and decide for themselves what mix of
goods and services will best meet their personal care needs. Veterans and
their families deserve no less.
Pundits like Mr. Krugman are holding the veterans hostage to a failed
vision of single-payer health care because they believe the VA is
politically unassailable. Similarly, supporters of a massive expansion of
State Children's Health Insurance Program counted on using kids as a human
shield to advance their cause. But Mr. Bush vetoed SCHIP to stop the
spread of government-run healthcare. Now he and others should take on the
VA monopoly. Instead of promoting its expansion, he should give vets the
same freedom and dignity they were fighting for in Iraq.
Robert Goldberg is vice president of the Center for Medicine in the Public
Interest.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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