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TWO REPORTS BLAST MARION VA FACILITY FOR SURGICAL
DEATHS AND POOR MANAGEMENT -- The surgical
specialty
care unit has been found to have been "in
complete
disarray," resulting in nine confirmed deaths,
with
ten additional deaths still under review.

The long-awaited VAOIG report on the problems at
the Marion VA is out.
It paints a very ugly picture of care and
management at the facility.
Complete VAOIG report is here...
http://www.v
a.gov/oig/54/reports/VAOIG-07-03386-65.pdf
There is also a Medical Inspector's report that
is equally harsh in its condemnation of the Marion VA. That report
here...
http://www.va.gov/health/docs/2007-D-1356Marion.pdf
These reports are SO UGLY that they prompted the
VA Central Office to issue a press release with an apology to veterans and
a promise to clean up the Marion VA.
Besides the two reports which you can download
and read...we have a short news story followed by the VA's press release.
For a complete background on the problems at the
Marion VA, use the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=marion&op=and
News story
here...
http://www.thesouthern.com/article
s/2008/01/28/breaking_news/doc479e428662e88837271514.txt
Story below:
-------------------------
Washington report chastises Marion VA for
surgical deaths
BY JOHN HOMAN, The Southern
MARION — The surgical specialty care line at the VA Medical Center in
Marion has been found by the Office of Healthcare Inspections (OHI) with
the Inspector General in Washington to have been “in complete disarray,”
resulting in nine confirmed deaths.
Moreover, 10 additional deaths are still under review.
Based on a review of 29 deaths that occurred among veteran patients who
underwent surgery at Marion during Fiscal Year 2007, OHI concluded that
there were specific problems with actual quality of care provided to
veteran patients.
Article continues below:
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“These problems included pre-operative,
intra-operative, and post-operative quality of care issues,” said Dr. John
Daigh, Jr., assistant inspector general for healthcare inspections. OHI
cites three mortality cases as examples of those which did not meet the
standard of care.
“A veteran suffered a traumatic rupture of his spleen requiring urgent
surgery,” Daigh said. “Sufficient blood transfusions were prepared for
this patient, but they were administered too late to be effective.
“The second example involved the care provided for a patient whose heart
disease placed him at increased risk for surgery. This patient, who died
one day after surgery, received inadequate intra- and post-operative care.
“The third case involved a death following elective gallbladder surgery,
with clear evidence of inadequate management of the patient’s ventilation
and post-operative instability.”
Congressman Jerry Costello, D-Belleville, after being briefed on the
report Monday, said he finds the report “shocking.”
Costello said he was reluctant to point a finger at anyone while the
investigation was ongoing but now that the facts of the case are coming
out, he will have plenty to say.
“First and foremost, the families of the nine veterans who have died due
to substandard care need to be notified. The report must be released to
the public immediately. Changes must also be made in the management
structure of the facility.”
Costello said it appears to him that Marion officials made “poor”
management decisions and ignored procedures that were already in place.
-------------------------
VA press release here...
http://www.va
watchdog.org/08/vap08/vap010908-1.htm
Press release below:
-------------------------
VA Leadership Vows to Fix Problems Identified at
Marion VA Medical Center
January 28, 2008
WASHINGTON - The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) today affirmed its
determination to quickly address problems at its Marion, Illinois
hospital. The VA today released the results of two investigations into
concerns involving patient care at the Marion facility.
VA’s Inspector General was contacted by Dr. Michael J. Kussman, VA’s Under
Secretary for Health on September 10, 2007, and also subsequently by
Congress, to perform a comprehensive review of surgical services at the
facility after VA’s National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP)
found there was a higher death rate than expected during the period from
October 1, 2006 through March 31, 2007. Representatives of the NSQIP
program visited Marion from August 29-30, 2007. Their follow-up report led
to the immediate suspension by Veterans Health Administration (VHA)
leadership of all major surgeries at the hospital, which have not been
resumed.
“We found the problems ourselves; we took
immediate action to keep patients from being harmed as soon as we knew
what was going on; we’re extremely sorry for what happened; and we’ll hold
those who created the problems accountable,” said Dr. Michael J. Kussman,
VA’s Under Secretary for Health. “We’re determined to do what’s right for
our veterans and their families, not only at Marion, but everywhere in
VA’s medical system.”
The Inspector General’s report, augmented by a separate internal review by
VA’s Medical Inspector begun on September 4, 2007, identified four areas
in which Marion employees failed to comply with Federal and local
regulations and VA directives and procedures. They include:
* Quality management: Some reviews of the quality of care at the facility
were improperly done; cases selected for review by physicians’ peers (a
required practice in health care settings called “peer reviews”) were not
always properly evaluated; and patient deaths were inadequately and
insufficiently evaluated to be able to address issues in a timely manner.
* Credentialing: Credentialing is the process by
which health care organizations screen and evaluate medical providers in
terms of licensure, education, training, experience, competence and health
status. The facility, at times, failed to document its consideration of
important credentialing information such as malpractice claims; and
documentation related to the verification of licensure, registration and
certification requirements was not always done in a timely manner.
* Privileging: Privileging is the process by
which physicians are granted permissions to practice and to perform
various diagnostic and therapeutic procedures. The Inspector General found
instances in which surgeons performed procedures they were not authorized
to perform. The Medical Center also failed to adequately consider past
performance and outcomes in decisions whether to renew surgeons’
permission to continue to perform certain procedures. In addition, both
the Inspector General and the Medical Inspector’s reports criticize the
facility for allowing surgeries to be performed that were more complex
than the facility could handle based on its staff and capabilities.
Concerns include the fact the Medical Center did not have 24-hour coverage
in respiratory therapy, pharmacy, and radiology.
* Facility Leadership: The Inspector General
believed there were warnings on many of the problems identified in NSQIP’s
site visit, including NSQIP’s own data, Marion’s leadership should have
acted upon before others discovered the problem. According to the IG,
though, most of this information was “not disseminated to other VHA
managerial entities such as VISN 15 (the facility’s parent network) or VA
headquarters in Washington, DC.”
VA is examining each of these areas, not only at Marion but throughout the
Department’s health care system, to ensure these types of issues are not
present at other facilities, and to enhance regulations to prevent these
problems from occurring in the future. A VHA work group has been convened
to develop new requirements for peer reviews, augmenting peer reviews
conducted at smaller facilities by requiring external reviews and
establishing improved parameters for future peer reviews of all types.
These additional directives will be enacted within the month.
Both the Inspector General and the Medical Inspector’s reports agreed
there had been numerous instances of poor medical care at the facility.
The Inspector General’s report states the care of three patients who died
following surgical procedures during Fiscal Year 2007 had “significant
problems.” The Medical Inspector’s report, which reviewed Fiscal Years
2006 and 2007, and therefore substantially more cases, identifies a total
of nine deaths directly attributable to substandard care. There were 34
cases in which care complicated patients’ health, including 10 others who
died. In these cases, the Medical Inspector could not determine if the
care they received caused their deaths.
VA will begin immediately to contact those veterans and families of
veterans who are believed to have been harmed by surgical care at the
facility within the past two years to review their care with them, and
known instances of substandard care will be disclosed. The Department will
also assist patients and families who believe they have been harmed in
their efforts to receive compensation. The Department has set up a
toll-free phone number for patients and their families who are concerned
about the care they received at the Marion VA hospital to call to receive
additional information. The number is 1-800-983-0932.
“I am angered about the issues at Marion that are identified in these
reports. We sincerely apologize to those who have received poor care, to
their loved ones, to the Marion community, and to all veterans and their
families,” said Dr. Kussman. “We are determined to correct the problems we
have uncovered and return Marion to a level of health care our veterans
deserve.”
Last September, VA removed Marion’s hospital director, chief of staff,
chief of surgery and an anesthesiologist from their positions and placed
them in other administrative positions or on administrative leave. (The
anesthesiologist has since resigned.) Today, the Department also announced
it has initiated an Administrative Board of Investigation to review
quality of care issues and issues raised by employee groups, and neither
the previous director nor the chief of staff will be returned to work at
the facility, even if they are exonerated. In addition, a surgeon who had
not previously disclosed information related to his license to practice
medicine has been fired.
The Medical Inspector’s report is available, in redacted form to comply
with privacy laws, at
http://www.va.gov
/health/docs/2007-D-1356Marion.pdf.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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