The popular-vote loser and allegedly illegitimate President Donald Trump wants to privatize the Veterans Administration. The Liar-in-Chief claims that vets are not getting the medical care they deserve.
But Bill Moyers.com reports, “Scamming US Veterans: Efforts to Privatize Veterans Administration’s Health System … Evidence suggests that a privatized system would make worse any problems veterans now face in getting care — and it is likely to cost more money.”
The VA currently has 168 VA Medical Centers (hospitals) and 1,053 outpatient sites.
How much do you think the VA infrastructure is worth – all those hospitals and clinics that were built with public funds over the last century – Trillions?
Just one of the 168 VA hospitals, the one in Palo Alto, has over 800 beds, including three nursing homes and a 100-bed homeless domiciliary – all to serve more than 67,000 enrolled Veterans. Although the cost of building a hospital varies depending on where you live, an answer on Quora estimated the cost is about $1.5 million per bed. If accurate, the VA hospital in Palo Alto is worth about $12 billion.
If one VA hospital is worth about $12 billion, what are all of them worth?
Some states are already giving, yes giving – not selling, public schools and the property to private sector, for profit, corporate charters and those charters, when they go out of business, and many close their doors annually, can sell that property resulting in a 100-percent profit because that land and the buildings were free. If the state wants that school back that taxpayers already paid for, then it has to be paid for again with public funds.
I’m a woodworker. That’s my hobby. Last summer on a Saturday, even with all my safety gear (goggles, Hepa filter mask, ear protection, gloves) I still ended up with a wood-chip embedded under my left eye lid and that chip was scratching the surface of my eye. When I called the VA’s 24/7 nurse, I was told that there was a high risk of losing vision in that eye. She said, “Get to a hospital emergency center as soon as possible.”
My vision was blurred and the pain was intense. The closest hospital emergency room was at John Muir Hospital in Walnut Creek, and my VA medical coverage might not cover the cost of that visit.
It cost my former sister-in-law several thousand dollars when her youngest son had a severe asthma attack, and she didn’t have health insurance.
“For patients without health insurance, an emergency room visit typically costs from $150 – $3,000 or more, depending on the severity of the condition and what diagnostic tests and treatment are performed. In some cases, especially where critical care is required and/or a procedure or surgery is performed, the cost could reach $20,000 or more. “ – CostHelper.com
I couldn’t risk it but I couldn’t drive, so I asked a friend to drive me to the VA hospital in Palo Alto, California where the VA has a 24/7 emergency medical center. That VA hospital is huge.
After arriving, I didn’t have to wait long before I was seen by two doctors who then referred me to a specialist, a doctor on call from the Stanford University’s Medical Center. The Stanford doctor drove to me at the VA hospital and saved my eye.
I discovered, when possible, the VA has partnered with many private sector and university hospitals to make sure vets get the care they need. After all, The Washington Post reports there is a shortage of primary care physicians in the United States, and it’s going to get worse.
In any huge system there is going to be problems, but my experience with the VA is that the problems are few compared to the private sector where I had my medical care for decades before I retired from teaching and turned to the VA for medical care.
And U.S. News.com reports, “Medical Errors Are Third Leading Cause of Death in the U.S.”
“People don’t just die from heart attacks and bacteria, they die from system-wide failings and poorly coordinated care,” says the study’s lead author, Dr. Martin Makary, a professor of surgery and health policy at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. “It’s medical care gone awry.”
Turning the nation’s vets over to the private sector, for profit medical care system is not the solution to any problems the VA medical system has.
In fact, thanks to the VA’s innovative computer information system, most of the mistakes that cause deaths outside of the VA do not happen there.
From the Bill Moyers piece (link above): “The key point was that the VA system effectively tracks patients through their various contacts with doctors and other health care professionals.”
“This reduces the likelihood that they will get unneeded treatment, but more importantly, ensures that the patient’s doctors are aware of the other treatments their patient is receiving. A major problem for patients seeing multiple doctors is that none of them may have full knowledge of the set of conditions afflicting the patient or the drugs they might be taking. By keeping a central system and having a general practitioner assigned to oversee the patient’s care, the VA system minimizes this source of mistakes. In fact, this model is so successful that most providers have tried to move in the same direction in recent years.”
The VA also negotiates the cost of drugs with the private-sector, for-profit drug industry. The Los Angeles Times reports, “the VA pays 40% less for drugs than Medicare.” In fact, if Trump and/or Congress allowed Medicare to negotiate drug prices too, the savings could be about $30 billion annually.
Back to Bill Moyers: “Nonetheless, as Alicia Mundy points out in a recent Washington Monthly piece, the VA system still did quite well by most measures. An analysis done for the VA in 2010 found that nearly all the studies comparing the quality of VA care with its counterparts in the private and public sector found that the VA provided care that was as good or better than what was available in its competitors.”
The New York Review of Books says, “Privatization means that a public service is taken over by a for-profit business, whose highest goal is profit. Investors expect a profit when a business moves into a new venture. The new corporation operating the hospital or the prison or the fire department (or the school) cuts costs by every means to increase profits. …
“For the past fifteen years, the nation’s public schools have been a prime target for privatization. Unbeknownst to the public, those who would privatize the public schools call themselves ‘reformers’ to disguise their goal. Who could be opposed to ‘reform’? These days, those who call themselves ‘education reformers’ are likely to be hedge fund managers, entrepreneurs, and billionaires, not educators. The ‘reform’ movement loudly proclaims the failure of American public education and seeks to turn public dollars over to entrepreneurs, corporate chains, mom-and-pop operations, religious organizations, and almost anyone else who wants to open a school.”
It’s already happening to our public schools; it can happen to the Veterans Administration too. I don’t want some greedy SOB like Donald Trump to destroy the quality of VA medical care.
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Lloyd Lofthouse is a former U.S. Marine, Vietnam Veteran, retired public school teacher, journalist, and award-winning author.
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Reblogged this on Lloyd Lofthouse.
Good blog Lloyd. I fear that he will take away benefits like the Veteran’s stipend to widows. My mother is in elder care, paid for in part by a monthly check from the VA. It is the only claim our family every made on behalf of my WWII veteran father. My mother would be dead but for the that monthly check which supplements her small social security income. At 94, she outlived her assets and the fruit of her long years of sacrifice. She outlived one of her children. I have a teacher’s pension, which about covers my family’s needs, so help from us would be difficult.
I paid an attorney $2,000 to help me through the complex application process. She is in a good place and her last days will be spent in comfort and safety. If our “elected” president manages to take those away from her, I don’t know what we will do.
As for the schools, don’t get me started. At our last NHS gathering, Barbara Muirhead said she thought de Voss was a good pick for the education cabinet post. I was shocked. She explained that she hoped de Voss would get rid of that cabinet position and schools will be back in control of the states. That would be good for California, but not nation wide. She further suggested that the red states would soon see the result of their right-winged loyalty in terms of failure of every social justice issue we can name. Perhaps they would then vote for a more humane government, less tied to the money lenders who now reside in our administrative temples. She has a point.
Sure wish you could find your way back here one time and join us for an afternoon session on a third Tuesday. We do have wonderful conversations.
Take care… Gail
I thnk about making that trip south all the time. Maybe one day.
The DOE is not the only agency that deals with the needs of children. The U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS), another agency I’m sure Trump is out to dismantle so he can cut taxes on the wealthy and corporations and spend more on the military, has programs and services like Head Start, SNAP, TANF, child support enforcement, paying for child care, foster care, adoption, etc.
https://www.hhs.gov/programs/social-services/index.html
The National School Lunch Program is managed by the US Department of Agriculture. Free and reduced lunches are managed by the USDA. I’m sure that both of these federal agencies are also being targeted by the malignant narcissist.
Yesterday I went to one of the local farmers’ markets. Sitting in front of a coffee shop across from the park was a thuggish looking man who was wearing a black knit cap with TRUMP writ large in bright red colors above his eyebrows. The former Marine inside of me kicked in and it was all I could do to not confront him. I had to keep telling myself that it would do no good to attempt to reason with this ignorant, easily fooled and manipulated troglodyte. I kept walking and avoided glaring at him.
When the revolution comes to stop Trump and his fascist, racist, money-mongering, anti-freedom, authoritarian minions, those who wear the malignant narcissist’s colors will be easy targets.
Trump has decalrd war on the U.S. government and the U.S. Constitution. If he was the leader of a foreign country, what he is doing would be an act of war.