November 3, 2009 A
new report from the inspector general in the Department of Veterans
Affairs finds that the VA Medical Center in Marion, Ill., continues to
be plagued by quality management and patient care problems some two
years after a suspicious spike in the number of post-surgical patient
deaths there.
A 2008 investigation found that at least nine
patients died because of surgical mistakes and poor post-surgical care
at the VA hospital in Marion, which is in southern Illinois. That
report made recommendations to improve conditions at the facility.
The
new report finds poor quality management oversight, inconsistencies in
the way patient deaths are reported and continuing problems with
ensuring patient safety — including the discovery that surgeons were
performing procedures they were not authorized to handle.
Sen. Richard Durbin (D-IL) calls the findings "appalling."
"It
is inexcusable that after more than two years of adjustments and
reviews, Marion VA is still failing our veterans in quality of care,"
he says in a press release. "This cannot and must not continue."
Durbin
and other members of the state's congressional delegation, including
Sen. Roland Burris (D-IL), and Reps. John Shimkus (R-IL) and Jerry
Costello (D-IL), sent a sharply worded letter to Veterans Affairs
Secretary Eric Shinseki in which they demanded that VA management be
held accountable for the problems at the Marion facility.
A
suspicious spike in post-surgical patient deaths between October 2006
and August 2007 led the VA to abruptly suspend surgical operations at
the Marion VA Medical Center. NPR reported
the story of a Kentucky woman whose husband died suddenly after what
was considered to be relatively minor surgery for gallstones.
In
January 2008, the VA's inspector general found that the surgical unit
in the VA Medical Center in Marion was in complete disarray, with
doctors performing surgeries they weren't qualified to perform.
Hospital administrators were found to respond slowly, if at all, to
complaints or problems when they surfaced.
Serious quality
management and care problems were found in the surgical unit's
preoperative care, intraoperative care and postoperative care. The
inspector general's report found that the deaths of at least nine
patients were "directly attributable" to surgical mistakes and
substandard care at the Marion VA hospital. More than a dozen
additional patients suffered serious harm because of such mistakes,
according to the inspector general's report, and as many as 10
additional patients may have died because of poor care at Marion.
One
surgeon in particular, Dr. Jose Veizaga-Mendez, was found to be prone
to committing surgical errors and failing to correct his mistakes. He
had been hired by the VA despite surrendering his license in
Massachusetts while under investigation for malpractice there.
Shinseki
has agreed to meet with members of the Illinois delegation on Wednesday
to discuss the ongoing problems at the Marion VA Medical Center.
Jerry