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From Chuck Weber, your Veteran Service Officer... |
VA Appointments |
Next Medical Challenge: Catching Up on Millions of Missed Ones
Federal medical experts have estimated that as many as 41 percent of
Americans have deferred regular check-ups or non-emergency care visits
since last spring, when public officials ordered business closures and
stay-at-home orders in an effort to contain the spread of COVID-19. VA
officials said that they have made up some of those lost appointments
through telehealth. In a roundtable with reporters this week, VA
Secretary Denis McDonough said that the number of online appointments
has increased almost 20-fold in the last year, from 2,500 a day last
March to 45,000 a day this month. “But we’re still looking at delayed or
deferred care of more than 19 million appointments,” he said. “And some
of that delayed care is going to be more costly than it has been in the
past.”
Department leaders are highlighting those new expenses as part of their
campaign for President Joe Biden’s coronavirus relief package, under
debate on Capitol Hill. The $1.9 trillion plan includes about $15
billion in new VA spending, money that some conservatives have argued
could be deferred until next fiscal year, and considered in the normal
budgeting process. Secretary McDonough dismissed that assessment. “I
wish we had the ability to just let this be an issue out over the
horizon,” he said. “But with telehealth, we need additional information
technology investments now to respond to the demand, including more
hardware and software for vets. And we don’t know exactly when all those
other [in-person] appointments will come back.”
Stone said medical officials are already preparing for the flood of
rescheduled appointments. At the height of the pandemic, about 6,000
workers a day were unable to work because of contract tracing or
personal illness. That number is down to around 1,000 a day now,
effectively giving VA an influx of extra workers to handle rising
patient demands. He said that as veterans receive vaccines, they are
also being informed of services that have reopened (to make up for
missed medical appointments) and of other resources available to them.
That’s particularly important for individuals who may be facing new
mental health issues from the stress and isolation of the pandemic.
“This isn’t something that will just be over,” he said. “We recognize
that we’re going to be dealing with the effects of this pandemic
probably for the next few years.”
The vaccine effort shouldn’t take nearly as long. In the first few weeks
of vaccine distribution, VA was administering about 104,000 doses a
week. Now they’re up to about 194,000 each week, Stone said, with the
capability of going even higher. “When vaccines are available from
our federal partners, we’re at the front of the line asking for more,”
he said. “They’re seeing that we can get it into people’s arms quickly,
so that has helped us get more.” Nearly 10,600 VA patients have died
from coronavirus complications in the last year. Nationwide, nearly
520,000 Americans have died from medical issues linked to the virus. Source: MilitaryTimes | Leo Shane III | March 3, 2021 |