The
goal of the current administration is to privatize the VA, and arguably the
real reason the Secretary of Veterans Affairs was summarily fired is that he
wasn’t moving rapidly enough in that direction. At issue may not be
money—Trump’s proposed 2019 budget for the VA would be nearly $200 billion, or
a 12 percent increase over the current year. Rather, the main concern is
ideological—getting government out of health care. My question is: what would
that mean for older people, many of whom receive VA benefits?
In
many respects, the VA provides excellent care for older veterans. It has a long
history of innovation in the geriatric realm: it has for years had a network of
Geriatric Research and Clinical Education Centers (GRECC) that carry out
research and provide clinical care to older people. Its Geriatric Evaluation and
Management Units (GEMU) that offer inpatient geriatric assessment have been
shown to slow the rate of functional decline compared to standard care. The VA
has a model Extended Care program that provides room, board, and medical care
to veterans needing long term care. And in recent years, it has developed an
innovative home visit program for its neediest members. Are all these programs
a fluke?
To
understand, we need a little perspective. The VA health system was created by Congress in the immediate aftermath of
World War II. It had several missions including: improving the health and
function of US veterans, providing education and training to medical students
and residents, and conducting research. But for many years, it was the poor
stepchild of the federal government. The Secretary of Veterans Affairs did not
become a cabinet level position until 1989. The system became known for
inefficiency and mediocrity. But then in 1994, then Under Secretary for Health
in the VA John Kizer initiated a radical transformation of the VA system. He
created a new system of regional integrated service networks. He developed and
implemented a system of quality indicators to drive improved performance.
The
transformation worked. A 2007 study published in the Milbank Quarterly looked
at performance over the 1998-2005 period and found that the VA outperformed traditional
Medicare, Medicaid, and the private sector on a variety of indices.
A RAND study published in 2016 examined the period from 2005 to 2015 and again found that the VA performance was comparable to or superior to standard American health care in most domains.
A RAND study published in 2016 examined the period from 2005 to 2015 and again found that the VA performance was comparable to or superior to standard American health care in most domains.
But
there were cracks in the system. By 2014, those cracks split wide open, and a
scandal over long wait times—and a cover-up to conceal the problem—erupted. As
Kizer himself, the mover and shaker of the earlier reforms, argued in a New England Journal of Medicine essay in 2014 written with health policy expert Ashish Jha,
the reforms have become unfocused and the bureaucracy bloated. The original
idea of using quality indicators had mushroomed until there were so many indicators
that both administrators and physicians were paralyzed; the earlier regionalization
and centralization of the VA system, while effective managerially, had led to
excess insularity of the entire system from new developments in the private
sector (many of which may have taken their inspiration from the VA in the first
place!)
The solution they proposed was to fix those problems, not to outsource VA care to the private sector. Firing Secretary Shulkin, who by all accounts was a very competent and visionary leader, and replacing him with the president’s personal physician, Ronny Jackson who has no experience managing a large organization (let alone one as complex and needy of reform as the VA), is a classic case of throwing out the baby with the bathwater.
The solution they proposed was to fix those problems, not to outsource VA care to the private sector. Firing Secretary Shulkin, who by all accounts was a very competent and visionary leader, and replacing him with the president’s personal physician, Ronny Jackson who has no experience managing a large organization (let alone one as complex and needy of reform as the VA), is a classic case of throwing out the baby with the bathwater.
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