VA issues illustrate pitfalls of government health care

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In the fall of 2020, a patient in Augusta, Georgia, went to the local Veterans Affairs medical center for a minimally invasive urologic surgery, according to a new report from the VA’s Office of Inspector General.

Less than two weeks later, the OIG reports, he was dead. The Inspector General concluded there had been “multiple deficiencies” in the patient’s care. Among them, his doctor allegedly failed to account for his history of chest infections and alcoholism.

Sadly, this is just one of countless examples of the VA’s failure to provide adequate care. And it shows why proposals to nationalize U.S. health care — like U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders’ bill to establish Medicare for All, which he reintroduced in May — are bad news.

Every six months, the VA’s Inspector General submits a report to Congress on the agency’s performance. And every six months, the story is the same: gross incompetence, fraud, long wait times and substandard care.

The OIG’s most recent report, which covered October 2021 to March 2022, identified more than $4 billion in “monetary impact” — waste, questionable spending, fraud and the like.

Investigations into offending behavior led to more than 100 arrests for crimes that included wire fraud and bribery. One Louisiana doctor had received more than $650,000 in kickbacks from a medical supply company.

While the waste and criminality are galling, the patient stories are worse.

A veteran who sought treatment and eventually died at a VA center in New Mexico waited 175 days for a CT scan for possible lung cancer, according to the OIG. Then, even though the results showed signs of cancer, the patient did not receive a follow-up biopsy. The patient eventually received a conclusive cancer diagnosis at a non-VA hospital.

The OIG also reported on a patient who died 17 days after being discharged from a VA medical center in Gainesville, Florida, after a 33-day hospital stay. The Inspector General concluded that the facility “failed to develop a discharge plan that adequately ensured patient safety and continuity of care.”

Even patients not in imminent danger face the stress of extremely long waits. At the VA clinic in Anaheim, Californina, at the beginning of June, new patients could expect to wait 29 days for an appointment. At the three clinics in Jacksonville, Florida, the average wait in early June was 52 days. And at one clinic in Fayetteville, North Carolina, earlier this month, it was 96 days.

None of this should be especially surprising. Long waits and sloppy care characterize single-payer health care all over the world.

Canadians face a median wait of more than 25 weeks for treatment from a specialist following referral by their general practitioner, according to the Fraser Institute, a Canadian think tank. Such delays have serious consequences. Another source found more than 11,500 Canadian patients died while waiting for surgeries, procedures or diagnostic scans between 2020 and 2021.

Canada and the VA offer a glimpse of the subpar treatment, needless suffering and rampant fraud and abuse we can expect under Medicare for All.

Nothing contained in this blog is to be construed as necessarily reflecting the views of the Pacific Research Institute or as an attempt to thwart or aid the passage of any legislation.

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