Wednesday, May 24, 2017

Indiana Man Pleads Guilty to Charges Relating to a Kickback Scheme at the John Cochran VA Center for Wednesday, 24 May 2017 - Veterans Affairs Office in Washington, D.C., United States

Indiana Man Pleads Guilty to Charges Relating to a Kickback Scheme at the John Cochran VA Center for Wednesday, 24 May 2017 - Veterans Affairs Office in Washington, D.C., United States

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Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General (OIG).
Former VA supervisor pleads guilty to charges in a $270,000 kickback scheme involving medical center HVAC contracts from 2012 to 2015.

Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General (OIG)
801 I Street NorthWest
Washington, D.C. 20536, United States
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Healthcare Inspection – Nutrition and Food Service Environment of Care Concerns, Edward Hines, Jr. VA Hospital, Hines, Illinois for Wednesday, 24 May 2017 - Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General (OIG) in Washington, D.C., United States

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Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General (OIG).
The VA Office of Inspector General (OIG) conducted a healthcare inspection in response to a request in May 2016 from the then-Senator Mark Kirk and the then-Congresswoman Tammy Duckworth to assess Nutrition and Food Service (NFS) environment of care concerns at the Edward Hines, Jr. VA Hospital (facility), Hines, IL. We substantiated the persistent presence of cockroaches in and around NFS areas. During our unannounced site visit on May 10, 2016, we found dead cockroaches on glue traps dispersed throughout the facility’s main kitchen. We observed conditions favorable to pest infestation. We substantiated that several patients received food trays with cockroaches on them. We reviewed email correspondence between mental health staff to NFS managers from March 11, 2011, through December 28, 2015, and a mental health report dated March 13, 2014, that reported six complaints from patients that cockroaches were present on food trays delivered from the facility’s main kitchen to the MH unit via a transportation cart. We substantiated that leadership had knowledge of unsanitary food service conditions (cockroaches) in the NFS kitchen but had not successfully resolved the problem. The facility leadership relied on its pest control program and did not take additional action to control the problem. We determined that between March 2011 and September 2016, ten different individuals have been assigned to the Director’s position. The facility did not have a permanent Director which may have contributed to the failure to readily resolve a persistent pest issues. Additionally, Environment of Care inspection reports for at least the previous 2 years did not document the presence of cockroaches and facility leadership may have considered the cockroaches on patient trays intermittent. NFS staff informed us that understaffing contributed to the presence of cockroaches in the facility’s main kitchen.

Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General (OIG)
801 I Street NorthWest
Washington, D.C. 20536, United States
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Military blood program surges into the future for Wednesday, 24 May 2017 - Military Health System in Washington, D.C., United States

Health.mil

Gordon blood

Military blood program surges into the future

Army Sgt. Preston Campbell, donates for the low titer type O whole blood program at the Kendrick Memorial Blood Center on Fort Gordon, Georgia. (Courtesy photo)
FORT GORDON, Ga. — Military medical professionals know their field is uniquely dynamic, that innovation and flexibility are essential to saving lives in a forward setting, and that combat casualty care can lead to revolutionary approaches to healthcare off the battlefield, too. This is especially true for the collection and transfusion of blood products. From glass bottles to durable plastic bags and beyond, the Armed Services Blood Program has advanced the accessibility of blood products to the wounded warrior.
Kendrick Memorial Blood Center, here, is named after Army Maj. Gen. Douglas B. Kendrick, an innovator who helped shape the Army’s blood program during World War II. KMBC is one of 20 military blood collection sites.
Kendrick Memorial Blood Center personnel travel to military installations in Georgia and South Carolina collecting blood donations. Then they process and ship those donations into theater as well as to the Eisenhower Army Medical Center, Georgia, and other military medical facilities. That mission in itself is quite an undertaking, especially since KMBC is the Army’s top collecting facility, but they do much more than regular blood collection. 
The blood donor center also collects apheresis platelets and plasma, provides service to EAMC patients who need to give blood for therapeutic reasons or for their own use during surgery, and participates in several cutting-edge projects to supply specialized blood products to special operations commands. 
One of those projects is working with the local 75th Ranger Regiment on bringing universally safe whole blood to far forward settings, available right at the point of injury. Low titer type O whole blood is a special type of blood donation. “Whole blood” means the blood donation isn’t separated into red blood cells and plasma, and “low titer” refers to low levels of antibodies that could cause a reaction in a patient of a different blood type. 
The Ranger O Low Titer, or ROLO, program involves prescreening personnel prior to deployment to determine their suitability as a universal donor. While deployed in a remote location, pre-identified Rangers could serve as a walking blood bank, able to give the safest, most effective blood product possible with the aid of a medic, even if they aren’t near a combat support hospital or other major facility. 
Fort Gordon’s team began conducting screening drives with the 1st Ranger Battalion at Hunter Army Airfield, Georgia,  in 2016, testing hundreds for participation in the program. In March 2017, they added another component of combat care by collecting and shipping low titer O whole blood into theater weekly, in addition to the regular shipments of red blood cells and plasma. 
Having whole blood ready to transfuse increases the available inventory for Rangers and gives them other options besides having the assault force as the only source for safe, universal whole blood. 
“This is a great product that will certainly help save lives of our service members,” said Navy Capt. Roland Fahie, director of the Armed Services Blood Program. “By expanding this program and making it a true tri-service effort, we are able to increase the amount of low titer type O whole blood we are producing which, of course, equates to more lives saved.” 
Eisenhower Army Medical Center Chief of Blood Services Army Lt. Col. Melanie Sloan helped bring operational support for the ROLO and low titer O whole blood programs online at Fort Benning, Georgia, in 2015 and Fort Gordon in 2016.
“Our CENTCOM customers count on us to provide the best possible product and to make sure they have what they need, when and where they need it,” she said. “That’s why we’re here.”

Disclaimer: Re-published content may have been edited for length and clarity. Read original post. 

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Military Health System
The Pentagon
Washington, D.C. 20301, United States
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