Thursday, July 6, 2017

Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General (OIG) in Washington, D.C., United States for Thursday, 6 July 2017 "OIG Monthly Highlights"

Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General (OIG) in Washington, D.C., United States for Thursday, 6 July 2017 "OIG Monthly Highlights"
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 Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General (OIG).
CONGRESSIONAL TESTIMONY
Deputy Assistant Inspector General for Audits and Evaluations Testifies Before the House Committee on Veterans Affairs Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations on VA Financial Management Mr. Nick Dahl, Deputy Assistant Inspector General for Audits and Evaluations, Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), Office of Inspector General (OIG), testified before the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations on the results of the audit of VA’s consolidated financial statements and its progress on reducing improper payments. Mr. Dahl focused on the increase in material weaknesses from fiscal year (FY) 2015 to FY 2016 and the elevation of a significant deficiency to a material weakness. The new material weaknesses relate to (1) education benefits accrued liability and (2) actuarial estimates for compensation, pension, and burial benefits. The issue of the relationship between VA’s Chief Financial Officer (CFO) and Veterans Health Administration’s (VHA) CFO was elevated from a significant deficiency. The Subcommittee and the hearing witnesses also discussed the definition of improper payments and efforts to reduce them. Mr. Dahl was accompanied by Ms. Sue Schwendiman, Director, OIG Financial Audits Division.

Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General (OIG)
801 I Street North West
Washington, D.C. 20536, United States
800-827-1000
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Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General (OIG) in Washington, D.C., United States for Thursday, 6 July 2017 "Healthcare Inspection – Alleged Staffing, Quality of Care, and Administrative Deficiencies, Amarillo VA Health Care System, Amarillo, Texas"
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Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General (OIG).
OIG conducted a healthcare inspection at the request of Congressman Mac Thornberry to assess the validity of allegations concerning inadequate staffing, quality of care, and administrative deficiencies. We substantiated that nurse staffing at the facility has not been optimal for several years, but we could not substantiate that inadequate nurse staffing resulted in the death of three patients, an increase in patient falls, or an increase in pressure ulcers. We did not substantiate that the facility closed inpatient beds. We found that the facility diverted patients to non-VA facilities in accordance with its diversion policy. However, facility staff failed to document notification of local Emergency Medical Services (EMS) about the diversion status, and facility leaders did not review diversion data quarterly or provide evidence of performance monitoring.We did not substantiate that low physician staffing was the basis for facility managers’ decision to redirect certain EMS patients. We found that facility managers appropriately coordinated with local EMS to divert heart attack and stroke patients to non-VA facilities better equipped to manage such patients.We did not substantiate that patients’ diagnoses of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease were inappropriately changed to other diagnoses. We did not substantiate that physician transfer orders were overridden by the Chief Nurse Executive. We did not substantiate that mental health social workers failed to make required weekly visits for three high intensity patients. We also did not substantiate that in October 2013, a patient called the Veterans Crisis Line, requesting an appointment but still had not been seen at the facility by January 2014. We substantiated that the Gastrointestinal Endoscopy clinic had a procedure backlog due to a month long construction project in the endoscopy suite. As of October 2016, we noted that only 8 of 721 procedures were not completed within the time frame specified by the facility. We substantiated that the facility no longer performed complex surgeries. We could not substantiate that patients were referred to private hospitals for surgeries at their own expense. We recommended that the Facility Director: Continue efforts to recruit and hire for nursing staff vacancies, and ensure that, until optimal staffing is achieved, alternate methods are consistently available to meet patient care needs. Ensure members consistently attend Pressure Ulcer Committee meetings and document efficacy data on specific treatments, information on new treatment modalities, and action items, to include documentation of follow-up taken regarding action items.

Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General (OIG)
801 I Street North West
Washington, D.C. 20536, United States
800-827-1000
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U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs in Washington, D.C., United States for Thursday, 6 July 2017 "Veterans Affairs YouTube Update"
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US Department of Veterans Affairs
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Washington, D.C. 20420, United States
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Military Health System in Washington, D.C., United States for Thursday, 6 July 2017 
"Hospital corpsman disregards own life to save Marines"
Health.mil

dewert-grave

Hospital corpsman disregards own life to save Marines

Richard Dewert’s gravestone at Massachusetts National Cemetery. (Courtesy photo by Gary Boughton)
There are people who try to help, and then there are extraordinary people who selflessly give everything for someone else. Hospitalman Richard DeWert was one of the latter, and a Medal of Honor recipient.
Dewert joined the Navy in December 1948 in his hometown of Taunton, Massachusetts. The 17-year-old enlisted as a hospital corpsman, a position that can also serve alongside the Marines. So when conflict on the Korean Peninsula grew inevitable, DeWert volunteered to join the 1st Medical Battalion of the 1st Marine Division, which deployed to Korea in August 1950.

Navy Hospital Corpsman Richard Dewert. (U.S. Navy photo)Early in 1951, DeWert received orders to transfer to the 7th Marine Regiment, a unit known for epic battles, as well as for suffering more casualties than just about any other Marine unit during the Korean War. It was in battle with these men that he gave his life.
On April 5, 1951, DeWert was part of a unit that was headed to meet up with a few other friendly units near Kunchon when they came under fire.
When the first men were wounded, DeWert rushed to them. While he was dragging a seriously wounded Marine to safety, he got shot in the leg, but refused to stop until the injured man was out of the line of fire. He then went back into the fray, where he managed to drag yet another injured Marine out.
Knowing he was injured, DeWert’s comrades tried to get him medical help, but he refused. Despite their objections, he went back into the line of fire to rescue more men. As he tried to get to one injured Marine, he was shot in the shoulder. When he noticed that man was dead, he set out for another after hearing a cry for help.
While Dewert’s bravery was still going strong, his luck had run out. As he was crossing a field to help that fourth Marine, he was shot by the enemy and killed immediately. He was 19 years old.
DeWert was initially buried in a makeshift grave in Korea, but within a few months, he was reinterred at Woodlawn National Cemetery in Elmira, New York. About 35 years later, at his family’s request, DeWert’s grave was moved to the Massachusetts National Cemetery in 1987, where he remains.
In honor of his bravery and sacrifice, the DeWert Naval Ambulatory Care Center in Newport, Rhode Island, and the USS DeWert were named in his honor. Several other buildings in his Massachusetts hometown also bear his name.
Read more about Hospitalman Richard DeWert at our Military Medical History page.
Disclaimer: Re-published content may have been edited for length and clarity. Read original post. Read More ...

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Washington, D.C. 20301, United States
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