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FORMER VA HEALTH CHIEF SAYS SYSTEM FACES SERIOUS
FUNDING AND MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES -- Dr. Kenneth
Kizer:
"We see a future that is not particularly bright
for the VA."
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Dr. Kenneth Kizer |
For more information about Dr. Kenneth Kizer, use
the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=kizer&op=and
Story here...
http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0108/011608kp1.htm
Story below:
-------------------------
Veterans medical system faces serious funding,
management challenges
By Katherine McIntire Peters
kpeters@govexec.com
Few federal programs have seen the kind of turnaround experienced by the
Veterans Affairs Department's health care system in the late 1990s.
Formerly a poster child for substandard medical care and incompetent
management, VA's health care system now is considered by many to be the
best in the country. Its ratings for quality of care and customer
satisfaction have risen even as the patient load has increased. Major
media outlets have credited the agency's use of electronic medical
records, unprecedented even in the private sector, with improving medical
care, and Democratic presidential contenders Hillary Clinton and Barack
Obama have held up VA's system as a model for nationwide health care
reform.
But the department's success is in jeopardy, according to Dr. Kenneth
Kizer, undersecretary for health at Veterans Affairs from 1994 to 1999 and
the man many credit with leading the management reforms that ultimately
fixed the broken health care system. Kizer now serves on the independent
Commission on the Future of America's Veterans, which is examining
demographic and budgetary trends, as well as changes in both warfare and
health care, with an eye to providing the most effective programs and
services to veterans.
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"We see a future that is not particularly bright
for the VA," said Kizer, speaking at a forum in Washington sponsored by
the New America Foundation, a nonprofit public policy institute. Rising
medical costs, aging infrastructure and an increase in patients with
serious, and expensive, medical needs all are contributing to growing
concern that medical care for veterans will deteriorate under the current
system.
"Economics are going to be driving some very difficult decision-making
down the road," Kizer said. For that reason, the commission is planning to
recommend later this year that Congress create a government-chartered
entity, structured somewhat like the U.S. Postal Service, to manage health
care for veterans, he said. The entity's charter would detail its mission,
funding, governance and assets, as well as requirements that senior
managers hold specific skill sets and areas of expertise.
As a federal agency dependent on congressional appropriations, Veterans
Affairs is increasingly ill-suited to manage health care for veterans,
Kizer said. The annual appropriations process creates program instability
and prevents strategic planning. In addition, the agency cannot exercise
the kind of management judgment that corporations routinely exercise.
For example, VA has found it extraordinarily difficult to close underused
or outdated hospitals since no member of Congress wants to lose a medical
facility in his or her district, Kizer said. As a result, the agency can't
close hospitals in areas where they're not needed or build new ones in
areas where they are needed.
"The average age of VA hospitals is 50 years old," said William
Diefenderfer, former deputy director of the Office of Management and
Budget and now a commissioner. "We haven't built a new hospital in 20
years. We need a new hospital in Orlando, but we haven't been able to do
it."
A government-chartered entity "would have the authority to buy and sell
assets and borrow money against them," Diefenderfer said. It also would be
able to create new sources of revenue. For example, it could provide
health care to all veterans and their families who have the ability to pay
- something the VA cannot do currently.
Arthur Hamerschlag, former chief of staff at the Veterans Health
Administration, the health care arm of Veterans Affairs, said he was not
necessarily opposed to the creation of a government-chartered health
system for veterans, but that a number of issues would first need to be
resolved, including how the new entity would negotiate drug prices and
whether or not it would accept Medicare - something VHA does not do now.
Veterans Affairs has been able to hold down drug costs because federal law
allows the agency to negotiate below-market prices from pharmaceutical
companies, something private health care systems would likely protest if a
new quasi-private entity were created that could compete for patients, as
the commission envisions.
"I think VA will find itself in the medical marketplace in a way it does
not now," said Hamerschlag. "That's not necessarily a bad thing, but it
will require a different skill set."
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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