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FLORIDA VA FACILITIES CRITICIZED FOR SHUNTING PATIENTS
TO OTHER HOSPITALS -- Some critics say the
problem
may be more acute at VA facilities because of
the sheer pressure on the system.

For more about diverting VA patients, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=diversion+diverting&op=or
Story here...
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/n
ews/local/state/orl-locfhospitals07dec27,0,2916178.story
Story below:
-------------------------
VA medical centers criticized for shunting
patients to other hospitals
William R. Levesque
St. Petersburg Times
The Bay Pines VA Medical Center called it a rare mistake in June when it
turned away a nonveteran who suffered a fatal heart attack 200 feet from
its emergency room.
In fact, care at the two Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals in the
Tampa Bay area is hardly guaranteed, even for veterans.
Article continues below:
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For thousands of hours in recent years, Bay Pines
in St. Petersburg and the James A. Haley VA Medical Center in Tampa have
closed their doors to paramedics because the facilities were having
patient overload, forcing veterans to other hospitals.
Diverting patients, usually from emergency rooms, has become a fact of
life in American health care.
But some critics say the problem may be more acute at VA facilities
because of the sheer pressure on the system. Haley is the nation's busiest
VA facility, Bay Pines the fourth busiest.
Veterans Affairs says it cannot assess how local hospitals compare with
others nationally. Officials at Haley and Bay Pines say they are making it
a priority to perform better.
"There's no intent to deny veterans care," said Dr. George Van Buskirk,
chief of staff at Bay Pines.
"I like to think we're as compassionate as possible. We'd rather send them
out to a place that can take care of them than have them languish on a
gurney in the hallway."
Some question the VA's resources, though.
"The VA has never dealt with its capacity issues seriously," said Bill
Geden, district director in west-central Florida for the Blinded Veterans
Association.
"They're underfunded, undermanned and overloaded."
Haley has been on "divert" status for critical patients 27 percent of the
time since Jan. 1, 2006, or the equivalent of about 170 days, VA figures
show.
The hospital diverts all patients, regardless of condition, 16 percent of
the time.
The number of affected patients is unclear, though county emergency
services officials say VA hospitals tend to have less emergency traffic
than other facilities.
Since 2000, Bay Pines has diverted patients far more frequently than any
other hospital in Pinellas County. Last year, it diverted veterans for
1,150 hours (about 48 days), or 13 percent of the time, Pinellas paramedic
records show.
Those numbers are a sharp improvement. In 2003, for example, Bay Pines
diverted paramedics 2,464 hours (about 102 days), or 28 percent of the
time. Similar statistics were posted in 2004.
This year, Bay Pines is diverting about 7 percent of the time, roughly 500
hours so far.
Simple, brutal math works against both facilities.
Haley treated 133,000 veterans last year who visited the hospital as
outpatients about 1.5 million times. That's up from 48,000 patients
visiting about 1 million times in 2000.
"It's like putting your finger in a dike, actually," said Dr. Edward
Cutolo, Haley's chief of staff.
Bay Pines treated 49,800 patients in 2000 and tallied 516,000 outpatient
visits. In 2006, the numbers increased to 95,000 and 1.1 million,
respectively.
"It doesn't seem right that a veterans hospital can ever be filled up,"
said Dick Shockey, 77, an Army veteran who was turned away from Bay Pines
three years ago. "But veterans end up with a big surprise."
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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