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Special Report

VHA Is No Guarantee

Commentators both left and right sing the Veterans Health Administration's praises. That doesn't mean you should.

(Page 2 of 2)

(PDF) found 41% of eye appointments, 27% of cardiology appointments, and 20% of urology appointments were not made within 30 days.

In fairness, those reports relied on data from the VHA that is not always precise. For example, the Inspector General of the Veterans Administration investigated (PDF) wait times in the VHA in 2003 and found that the number of veterans who were waiting for an appointment was overstated. Yet even with the overstatement accounted for, there were still 218,000 veterans nationwide on a waiting list. However, the mis-measurement also seems to occur the opposite way. According to McClatchy Newspapers, a draft report by the Inspector General found that about 75% of scheduled appointments in the VHA occurred within 30 days. Earlier in the year, VA officials told Congress it was 95%.

Back in February, McClatchy Newspapers reported on considerable problems with the VHA's mental health system. Although the VHA began reforming its mental health treatment facilities over a decade ago, nearly 100 local VHA clinics provided virtually no mental health care in 2005. While spending on mental health increased slightly over that period, the VHA began treating many more veterans for mental health, driving down the amount spent per veteran from $3,560 in 1995 to $2,581 in 2004. Spending for outpatient treatment varied wildly, with some areas spending $2,000 per veteran and other spending as little as $500. Finally, in the last ten years average annual psychiatry visits for those on the VHA mental health system dropped from 11.7 to 8.1.

What about the various studies that gave the VHA such high marks? Interestingly, none of them track waiting times, and very few measures of mental health are included. The RAND study examined the greatest number of indicators, and on most of the indicators the recommended care was received no more than 80% of the time. Do we really want to model our health care system where the proper treatment is not given 1 out of 5 times?

Indeed, we don't want the U.S. health care system modeled on the VHA, and not just because the notion that the VHA is the best system in the U.S. is laughable. Putting everyone under a VHA type system would amount to "one-size-fits-all" for health care. A population of 300 million has very diverse health care needs, and any "system" needs to give the market sufficient liberty to meet those needs. Among other things, we should desire a health care system that doesn't ration by using waiting lists. The VHA doesn't measure up.

David Hogberg is a Washington writer and host of the website Health Hog.

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About the Author

David Hogberg is a reporter living in Washington, D.C. Follow David Hogberg on Twitter.

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