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FORT WAYNE VA FEASIBILITY STUDY IS COMPLETE --
Experience with releasing such information by
the VA has left veterans and the public waiting
after many deadlines have passed.

Fort Wayne VA
For more about proposed service cuts at the Fort
Wayne VA, use the VA Watchdog search engine... click here...
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http://www.news-sentinel.com/apps
/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20081028/NEWS/810280329
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-------------------------
FORT WAYNE VA FEASIBILITY STUDY IS COMPLETE
By Jennifer L. Boen
of The News-Sentinel
Findings from the latest feasibility study on current and future need of
services at the Fort Wayne campus of VA Northern Indiana Healthcare
Systems (VANIHCS) are expected to be in the hands of top Veterans
Administration officials soon, Rep. Mark Souder said Monday. The report by
contractor Booz Allen Hamilton was due Monday, and Souder said the next
step is for the findings and recommendations to go to the VA's Contracting
Officer's Technical Representative (COTR) for review of technical
correctness.
This study, commissioned by the VA in February, was to look in detail at
current and future need of outpatient services at the local facility, 2121
Lake Ave. But Souder said the newer study will also have to take into
account the previous one, commissioned in 2006 to look at inpatient
services, because so much of the previous one was “unacceptable.”
“I know the official position is that this one is to study outpatient
service, but are they just going to take the 25 percent that was
acceptable
and leave the other 75 percent unresolved and put that with the new
report? I think it's really looking at outpatient services at the current
hospital and how to merge that with the inpatient study results of the
first (study),” Souder said.
Experience with releasing such information by the VA has left veterans and
the public waiting after deadlines have passed. The 2006 inpatient study
results were to be released by summer 2007 but never really became public,
Souder said, because “they had bad information, bad data and bad
recommendations.”
According to the schedule for the latest study, the VA is to officially
accept the Booz Allen Hamilton report Nov. 10, and Souder's goal is to
have indication of the findings and recommendations by late November.
The VA has never suggested closing outpatient care in Fort Wayne, but the
report could suggest any number of things. Among ideas Souder and VA
officials have mentioned in the past for the Fort Wayne VA: relocating
outpatient services to a more modern site; contracting with local public
hospitals and physicians for services; and leasing or constructing a
smaller building to house inpatient care. “In my opinion … I think they're
going to recommend (the VA) lease space in a local facility, at Parkview
or Lutheran,” most likely at the Parkview on Randallia campus, adjacent to
the VA.
“Yes, there have been discussions and continue to be discussions,” with
the VA, said Parkview spokesman John Perlich. “We certainly remain
interested in working with them. We're hopeful that we'll be able to
participate with them to keep as many veterans' health services as
possible here.”
Parkview is moving specialty services to its new hospital at Interstate 69
and Dupont Road but is maintaining a small hospital with an ER and
maternity services at the Randallia/East State Boulevard campus. Carew
Medical Center, also near the VA hospital, is emptying out as physicians
relocate to the north-side Parkview Regional Medical Center campus.
“I think that the existing (VA) hospital would become outpatient and that
the VA would look at the entire campus area,” Souder said, with the
potential of growing VA services, inpatient and outpatient, in leased
space. “When I met with the employees at the VA hospital, they said, ‘If
you expand the inpatient unit at this hospital, then what are we going to
do with the growing outpatient demand?' ”
Gas prices, which will likely go up again when the economy stabilizes,
make traveling to Indianapolis or Lansing, the two closest VA hospitals,
unfeasible for veterans and their families.
“I believe the best option will probably be leasing space for inpatient
care, probably at Randallia, or it could be up north,” he said, noting he
hopes to have some answers by the end of November.
But in March, Dr. Gerald Cross, principal deputy undersecretary for health
for the VA said the final decision on local VA inpatient and outpatient
care will be made by the secretary of the VA, and then shared with
Congress.
Timeline
August 2003 - CARES Commission, appointed by the VA to evaluate all VA
health care facilities, comes to Fort Wayne to share findings and possible
closure of local 26-bed VA inpatient unit.
May 2004 - VA CARES Commission's recommendations to close the Fort Wayne
VA inpatient unit, saving $2.1 million annually, as well as other VA
facilities, accepted by then U.S. Secretary of Veterans Affairs Anthony
Principi, Congress and President Bush.
June 2004 - Veterans testify against hospital's closure at 3 1/2 -hour
town hall meeting sponsored by Rep. Mark Souder, R-3rd District.
July 2004 - Veterans for Better Health Care, a grassroots veteran
organization, forms to lobby against hospital's closure. Then-City
Councilman Dr. Tom Hayhurst leads the efforts.
August 2004 - Top VA officials come to Fort Wayne to hear testimony from
veterans in the region on need for keeping inpatient services as well as
specialized outpatient services in Fort Wayne. VA officials say local
hospital does not meet the minimum 30 beds that are needed for economic
feasibility.
November 2004 - Souder inserts a provision in a House bill on VA health
programs that calls for a halt to scheduled VA closings in Fort Wayne and
other communities, with further review of them.
February 2005 - Local veterans receiving cancer treatment are increasingly
referred to Indianapolis for care; VANIHCS director Dr. Michael Murphy
steps down.
July 2005 - VA officials acknowledge incorrect data used in feasibility
study of VANIHCS because the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, with reservists
and National Guard members called into active duty, were not accounted
for; VA says another study will be done.
January 2006 - Cathy Spivey-Paul, new director for VANIHCS, says Fort
Wayne campus in the next study will be separated from Marion campus, also
part of VANIHCS; second study to be done in spring of 2006.
September 2006 - Department of Veteran Affairs creates a “small hospital”
category of 25-bed minimum, giving more hope for retaining the Fort Wayne
inpatient unit.
November 2006 - Town hall meeting on VA hospital's future held at Memorial
Coliseum, drawing more than 300 veterans.
February 2007 - Local VA officials say more than 3,000 area veterans have
served in Afghanistan or Iraq.
March 2007 - On the national front, Department of Defense blasted for poor
care at some military hospitals; federal officials promise more funding
and improvements; mental health problems and suicides on the rise among
military members who have served in the Middle East.
August 2007 - Booz Allen Hamilton's report on Fort Wayne VA inpatient
services still not released.
February - Veterans Administration announces still another study to be
done on Fort Wayne VA health services, this one on outpatient care.
March - Souder receives the earlier Booz Allen Hamilton report on local
inpatient services, but 75 percent of the report is redacted, giving
almost no usable information.
April - More than 400 veterans, many angry and discouraged at lack of
information on the VA hospital's future, gather at Souder-sponsored town
hall meeting at Auburn's World War II Victory Museum.
October - Booz Allen Hamilton report on local outpatient VA services due
to national VA officials.
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Scott
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