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PATIENTS AND FAMILIES SAY PALO ALTO VA CENTER
FAILED THEM -- "...To all parents who want their
children
to get better - don't take them to Palo Alto."

For more about the Palo Alto VA, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=palo+alto&op=ph
Be sure to watch the video of this story at
the link below.
Story here...
http://www.komotv.com/news/local/15509282.html
Story below:
-------------------------
Patients, families say VA center failed them
By Tracy Vedder
As Brandon Gauvreau slowly walks down the corridor at Seattle's Swedish
Medical Center, he calls to his mother, "love you mom." Carol Blake,
waiting just a few steps away, answers, "love you too Brandon."
It's been just a few, short months since Blake, of Tacoma, thought her son
would never walk again.
And in Port Orchard, Linda Orton had given up hope for her son John, who
lays nearly motionless in a hospital bed in her front room. Her cry
strikes a chord in any parent's heart, "And the VA should stand up and
take responsibility for these men that are getting hurt."
Article continues below:
(use left/right arrows in screen to view more videos)
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Both women suffered their moments of deepest
despair at the one place that should have given them the most hope: the
VA's Polytrauma Rehab Center in Palo Alto, California. It's the VA's
premiere facility for severe brain trauma - one of only four such
hospitals in the country -- and the only one on the West Coast.
The notion makes Carol Blake laugh, "If that's premiere then I don't know
what the worst is - honestly."
And Orton has a warning: "to all parents who want their children to get
better - don't take them to Palo Alto."
Blake describes her view of the VA Palo Alto rehab center simply.
"Incompetence, the level of incompetence was very high at the facility."
Her son Brandon suffered an aneurism at McChord Air Force Base. After
surgery, he went to Palo Alto VA for intensive therapy.
Carol Blake says the therapy was minimal, and the staff was ill-equipped
for someone with such a severe brain injury. "My son's first doctor was a
student from Stanford specializing in orthopedics," she said.
She says the worst was when doctors and nurses ignored her for days after
she discovered swelling on Brandon's head. "I said 'did you look at the
site that was swollen?' he said 'yes I did.' I said 'then how on earth
could you not notice that his skull has opened and pus is coming from
it?'"
An infection had penetrated Brandon's skull. Emergency surgery removed the
infection along with part of Brandon's skull. As soon as she could, Blake
transfered her son to Swedish Medical Center in Seattle.
What was she afraid of? "That he would die! I mean how could they, I mean
this is his brain."
"Certainly our goal is to make sure that the veteran or the serviceman or
woman has a full recovery," said Dr. Stephen Ezeii-Okoye, Deputy Chief of
Staff at the Polytrauma Center. Directors at Palo Alto PRC insist quality
of care is not a problem.
"This hospital is run very well and the care has been exemplary,"
Ezeii-Okoye said. "I think we've had some terrific outcomes."
But several families have raised concerns, including Linda Orton. "I
wasn't happy with the way my son was treated," said Orton, who insists she
made several complaints.
Orton now cares for her son John around the clock. Following a tour in
Iraq, John was in a car crash in Spain. After surgery, he went to Palo
Alto for rehab.
His mother says many days John, who is only minimally conscious, got no
therapy at all.
"But if you couldn't talk and you had a brain injury and you couldn't move
they're not - he can't tell on them," she said.
She knows the active son she raised will never be the same, but she
expected more from the government he served.
"He's got so much more life to go."
The KOMO 4 Problem Solvers contacted Washington Senator Patty Murray so
she could see what these families are battling.
"I want those families to know they're not alone," said Murray, who holds
a powerful position on the Senate Veteran's Affairs committee
By the time of our interview, Murray had already put the new secretary of
Veterans Affairs, General James Peake, on notice about Palo Alto, and he
promised to investigate.
"Now, I don't want to just hear words," added Murray. "I want to see
action."
And Murray made a promise to the families we interviewed and to any other
vets who may need care at Palo Alto: "I am not giving up on this issue, it
is too important."
The Veterans Affairs Committee expects to ask the VA for specific
improvements at Palo Alto later this week. And Murray promised to follow
up what is said in D.C. with on-the-ground inspections of the California
hospital.
We will stay on top of it and let you know what happens.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
Don't forget to read all of today's VA
News Flashes (click here)
Click here to make VA Watchdog dot Org your homepage
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