|

VA Watchdog Stuff
cups, hats, shirts
click here to
support the site

Be sure to get all four
VA Watchdog dot Org
RSS feeds --
Daily VA
News Flashes
House CVA
Veterans' News
Senate CVA
Veterans' News
VA Press
Releases

Download
your
free copy of the
2007 VA benefits
handbook here...

|
Printer-Friendly Version
PALO ALTO VA HOSPITAL COMES UNDER FIRE --
One of
the issues is whether the facility is "cherry
picking"
patients, meaning they are accepting some, and
rejecting others with severe brain injuries.

Palo Alto, California VA facility
For more about the Palo Alto VA, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourva
benefits.org/sessearch.php?q=palo+alto&op=ph
Be sure to watch the video of this story at the
link below.
Story here...
http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=local&id=5778774
Story below:
Learn
More about how to get a VA Loan today -- Click Here

-------------------------
Palo Alto VA Hospital under fire
KGO By Vic Lee
PALO ALTO, Calif (KGO) - A Congressional inquiry is charging that the VA
Hospital in Palo Alto has been rejecting severely injured patients.
One of the issues is whether the facility is 'cherry picking' patients,
meaning they are accepting some, and rejecting others with severe brain
injuries. The other issue is the quality of care some veterans are getting
there and accusations that it isn't what it should be.
In September, Army Staff Sgt. Jay Wilkerson was honored with a Bronze Star
in Iraq. Wilkerson suffered severe brain injuries when his Humvee was
blown up by insurgents. Doctors successfully treated his wounds.
Wilkerson is one of many veterans who've been helped by the VA Hospital in
Palo Alto. In fact, this hospital, with its state of the art programs for
war related injuries, has been praised as the crown jewel of the VA
Medical System.
Article continues below:
MONEY TALKS NEWS
VIDEOS -- MONEY-SAVING TIPS FOR YOU
(use left/right arrows in screen to view more videos)
|
However, one of its most important rehabilitation
programs has come under sharp criticism by the House Veterans Oversight
and Investigations Subcommittee.
The Polytrauma Rehabilitation Center provides specialized care for the
most severely wounded veterans, many with traumatic brain injuries like
Wilkerson.
It is one of only four such units in the VA Hospital System. The others
are in Florida, Virginia and Minnesota. During a hearing in September, the
subcommittee revealed that in the first half of this year, while the other
three centers were running at almost 100 percent capacity, Palo Alto's
unit filled only 60 percent of its beds.
"They were rejecting our soldiers who should have been admitted there,"
says Congresswoman Ginny Brown-Waite of Florida.
Chairman Harry Mitchell of Arizona said his subcommittee found that "Palo
Alto would not accept minimally responsive brain injured patients, while
the other three did so, until the VA effectively forced Palo Alto to
accept these patients."
Brown-Waite believes the hospital has been cherry picking, by choosing
patients who are easier to treat to maintain high success rates.
"I think Palo Alto played games with our soldiers -- our wounded warriors
and that's just wrong."
Dr. Stephen Ezeii-Okoye, is the Deputy Chief of Staff at the Polytrauma
Center. He claims that the center accepts 80-percent of referrals. He says
that patients who were not admitted had other issues that would have
interfered with their treatment.
"What we did was to find them a more appropriate setting for treatment.
For example, patients who have post traumatic stress disorder, that would
interfere with their ability to participate or learn effectively, needed
to go through that treatment first."
Congresswoman Ginny Brown-Waite disagrees.
"I don't buy that. You can have a multi-disciplinary approach to a
patient. That's exactly what they should have had."
The subcommittee also reported that the VA's own investigative agency
found "disarray, morale problems and lack of leadership" at Palo Alto.
"I'm not familiar with that. I would say that's not a characterization of
this hospital. This hospital is run very well and the care has been
exemplary," says Dr. Stephen Ezeii-Okoye.
Carol Blake emphatically disagrees.
"Incompetence. The level of incompetence was very high at the facility."
Blake's son, Brandon Gauvreau, suffered traumatic brain injury when he was
stationed at McCord Air Force Base in Washington.
"I just passed out because I couldn't hear or see anything," says Brandon.
After surgery, the 19-year-old was transported to Palo Alto for
rehabilitation. At the time, he was still in a coma. Blake says the care
he received was substandard.
His mother says one nurse didn't even know how to insert a feeding tube,
causing her comatose son terrible pain.
"When they pushed things through that tube, he was arching his back all
the way off the bed and he would break out in these sweats and start
shaking."
Blake says her son developed a serious infection, which required surgery
to remove the bone flap from one side of his head. She says if she didn't
insist on tests, doctors never would have diagnosed it in time. Blake
finally transferred her son to a private hospital in Seattle.
ABC7 News has spoken with families of other injured veterans, who like
Blake, pulled their loved ones out of the Palo Alto Polytrauma Center.
Among them is Linda Orten. Her son, John Smith, was stationed in Iraq when
he suffered a blood clot in his head. She also says he received poor care
in Palo Alto.
He is now in a private rehab center in Washington, where Orten says his
condition has improved significantly.
Army Sgt. Michael Emory was shot in the head by a sniper in Iraq. His
wife, Maria, says his rehab care at Palo Alto was so bad, she had to spend
nights in his hospital room to insure he got proper treatment.
He is now at Bethesda Naval Hospital, awaiting more surgery.
The union that represents the Palo Alto VA Hospital's workers says its
members have been retaliated against for making similar complaints about
inadequate care and lack of management leadership.
The union issued a written statement, asking the hospital to appoint "a
qualified and credentialed physician to head up the polytrauma unit" They
say their concerns "have fallen on deaf ears."
Dr. Ezeii-Okoye says he can only respond in general terms, because privacy
laws prevent him from commenting on patients and employees.
"We've had very high patient satisfaction rates and very high employee
satisfaction rates and those things happen to go hand in hand."
We have asked the families we profiled in this story to allow the hospital
to respond to their complaints. As for the Congressional inquiry,
Ezeii-Okoye says the hospital is evaluating the feedback from the
hearings.
"We looked at it as an opportunity to be better and make sure that we are
offering our services to anyone who would need it."
As for Brandon, his mother says his condition has improved dramatically
since she moved him to the private hospital.
"In two weeks he's able to walk with minimal assist. In two weeks. This is
truly acute rehab."
Congresswoman Waite-Brown says the Veterans Affairs Committee is now
monitoring the occupancy rate at the Palo Alto Polytrauma Center. She says
the hospital has made progress since the hearing in September, but she
still is not satisfied.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
Don't forget to read all of today's VA
News Flashes (click here)
Click here to make VA Watchdog dot Org your homepage
email Larry
(go
back to VA Watchdog dot Org Home Page) |

VA Watchdog Stuff
cups, hats, shirts
click here to
support the site

|