| HOUSE SUBCOMMITTEE
TO PROBE VA'S CONTAMINATED EQUIPMENT
Panel will question VA officials about
mistakes that put patients at risk of possible exposure to HIV and
other infectious body fluids.
NOTE from Larry Scott, VA
Watchdog dot Org ... What can veterans really expect from this
scheduled hearing? Nothing! Some manufactured outrage
by Members of the Committee ... Words of condemnation ... Promises
by the VA ... then, no oversight so it will likely happen again.
All info on VA's contaminated equipment
is here.
Also, today we have two related stories:
http://www.vawatchdog.org/09/nf09/nfmay09/nf053009-3.htm
http://www.vawatchdog.org/09/nf09/nfmay09/nf053009-4.htm
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Congressional panel to analyze VA hospital mishaps
By BILL POOVEY
Associated Press Writer
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. -- A congressional panel will question
Department of Veterans Affairs officials about mistakes that put
patients at risk of possible exposure to HIV and other infectious
body fluids at three VA hospitals.
The VA recommended more than 10,000 former VA patients in Miami,
Murfreesboro, Tenn., and Augusta, Ga., get follow-up blood checks.
Five have tested positive for HIV and 43 have tested positive for
hepatitis, according to an update on the VA Web site Friday.
The U.S. House Committee on Veterans' Affairs oversight and
investigations subcommittee has set a June 16 hearing in
Washington to look into what caused the problems and what the VA
has done to fix them. The VA's inspector general is currently
investigating.
The subcommittee chairman, U.S. Rep. Harry Mitchell D-Arizona,
said Thursday in a phone interview that veterans who are testing
positive for HIV and hepatitis, "whether it came from these
improper procedures or not, the VA has a responsibility to take
care of these patients."
A top VA doctor has said no one will ever know if the positive
tests were caused by exposure to improperly operated or cleaned
endoscopic equipment used in colonoscopies at Murfreesboro and
Miami and to treat patients at the VA's ear, nose and throat
clinic in Augusta. The VA has not denied the mistakes.
U.S. Rep. Phil Roe, R-Tenn., was among those in Congress who asked
for an immediate investigation.
"As a physician and a veteran, this is disturbing to me on so many
levels and immediate action must be taken to ensure that all
medical equipment is clean and safe," Roe said in a statement.
The
VA's initial December discovery of an equipment mistake at
Murfreesboro led to a nationwide safety "step-up" at its 153
medical centers. Since then, the problems have been discussed with
staff at all VA hospitals and with representatives of the
equipment manufacturer, Olympus American. The VA has said problems
discovered at more than a dozen other of its medical facilities,
which officials declined to identify, did not require follow-up
blood tests for patients.
In Murfreesboro, the equipment - an incorrect valve - may have
allowed body fluid residue to transfer from patient to patient. VA
officials have said they don't know if that happened just one day
or for more than five years since the equipment was installed in
2003.
In Miami, a tube that was supposed to be cleaned after each
colonoscopy was instead cleaned at the end of each day, affecting
patients between May 2004 and March 2009. And in Augusta, the ENT
scopes used for looking into the nose and throat weren't properly
cleaned, affecting patients between January 2008 and November
2008.
The follow-up blood tests are continuing. As of May 18, VA records
show about 8,000 of the 10,483 possibly affected patients have
been notified of their follow-up blood test results.
Democratic U.S. Rep. Bart Gordon, whose Tennessee district
includes the VA hospital at Murfreesboro, said in a statement that
he hopes the House subcommittee can "get to the bottom of how this
unfolded and make certain it doesn't happen again."
One veteran who had a colonoscopy at Murfreesboro in 2007 and has
since tested negative for infections said he has VA officials have
tried to assure him that he can trust the hospitals' quality of
care. He said he plans to return there for future treatment, but
wants an explanation.
Gary Simpson, 57, of Spring City, said that despite the follow-up
blood tests, his marriage has suffered because he and his wife
have worried since the VA first notified him about the mistake in
February.
"They've apologized for it," Simpson said. "I'm not after money.
They've helped me a lot in the past. But it still continues to be
upsetting."
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
contaminated equipment, colonoscopy, endoscopic, hepatitis B,
hepatitis C, HIV |