[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 76 (Tuesday, May 20, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3161-S3162]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
VA HEALTH CARE
Mr. CORNYN. Madam President, the steady trickle of allegations
surrounding abuses of our veterans has turned from a trickle into a
monsoon. It seems every day that goes by there is an additional bad
news story about appointment lists that have been
[[Page S3162]]
cooked to look like the waiting times were not as long as they were,
allegations such as those at the Veterans' Administration hospital in
Phoenix, where allegedly there were secret waiting lists where 40
veterans died waiting to get health care, and the secret waiting list
was being created to make the backlog appear not as serious as it was.
As we discuss and debate all the numbers on wait times and backlogs,
it is important as always, whenever we are talking about statistics and
numbers, to remember these are real human beings and these are our
veterans with real individual stories.
They represent people such as Dale Richardson, who is a Vietnam
veteran from East Texas who died of cancer after reportedly waiting 2
months to hear back from the VA about scheduling chemotherapy
treatments. They represent people such as Thomas Breen, a Navy veteran
who, similar to Mr. Richardson, died of cancer after a 2-month period
in which he reportedly waited in vain to hear back from the VA about an
appointment time. They also represent people such as Edward Laird whose
story was written up in the Los Angeles Times this last weekend. Mr.
Laird is a Navy veteran, age 76, who discovered a couple of unusual
marks on his nose, and so he went to the doctor at the Phoenix VA
hospital to get it checked out, and according to the Los Angeles Times,
the doctor said he needed a biopsy, but it took almost 2 years before
Mr. Laird was allowed to see a VA specialist, and when he finally did
get to see the specialist, he was told that the biopsy was unnecessary
and so it wasn't done.
Mr. Laird found it hard to believe, but that is what they told him.
Unfortunately, by the time he got the VA hospital in Phoenix to agree
to see him--the situation with his nose which he could tell as simply a
layman had gotten worse--Mr. Laird was ultimately diagnosed with cancer
and literally half of his nose had to be taken off because of cancer.
As Mr. Laird told the Los Angeles Times: ``I have no nose, and I have
to put an ice cream stick up my nose at night so I can breathe.''
I will just mention one other story from the Phoenix system. Earlier
this month a woman named Kim Sertich told the Arizona Republic that her
father received such poor care at the Phoenix VA that she was forced to
pay for private care until he ultimately died in 2011. In her own
words, she said:
Whenever anyone asked how my father died, I say, ``From
being in the VA hospital.'' The icing on the cake is when I
received a letter of condolence from the hospital, and they
had the wrong name for my dad.
It is obvious from anecdote to anecdote, from the drip, drip, drip
that then turns into a flood, there is something terribly wrong with
the health care and the way the Veterans' Administration is
administering 589,000 claims, with more than half of them backlogged,
according to the standards and criteria of the Veterans'
Administration.
We have known that the backlog has been a problem for years. Indeed,
we have tried to come together in a bipartisan way and legislatively
through the national defense authorization bill, where we added money.
We have added resources to the VA system. Obviously, we have not gotten
to the bottom of the problem. Part of it, I am afraid, is systemic, and
some of it, sadly, is part of the bureaucratic culture at the VA, where
accountability is unknown. You don't get credit for doing a good job.
You don't get demerits for doing a bad job. There is no accountability,
and this is what you get without accountability.
Not only is the VA system failing to provide our military heroes with
reliable health care that they deserve, there are also news reports
that the VA across the country has been falsifying appointment data in
hopes of covering up wait times. Sadly, some of those allegations have
come from my State. We have allegations of data manipulation of these
appointment times in Austin, where I live, and Harlingen, in South
Texas, and San Antonio and Waco.
For that matter, a former VA doctor named Richard Krugman told the
Washington Examiner that up to 15,000 VA patients in South Texas were
either denied colonoscopies,--of course, those are cancer screening
examinations--or they were forced to endure long, pointless delays. Dr.
Krugman fears that many of those patients simply died awaiting their
cancer screening or awaiting treatment. If the problems at the VA are
just a fraction as serious as what they appear from the news reports
that we see day in and day out or the stories I recounted today, if
they are a fraction as severe as what they appear to be, we have a
national scandal of the highest order.
Let's be clear about what is happening. U.S. military veterans are
literally dying because of bureaucratic failures and in some instances
bureaucratic fraud. There is simply no excuse for what reportedly
happened in Harlingen, Phoenix or in any of the cities where veterans
or veterans officials have made their allegations. Yet it disturbs me
that I am not sure the President is taking this with the requisite
urgency. Apparently it is in the talking points to say, when somebody
raises this scandal--I think Jay Carney said the President is mad as
hell. That is what Eric Shinseki said when he testified before the
Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee last week, but that is, frankly, not
good enough. We need less rhetoric and more action.
For starters, the President has still not demanded the resignation of
the person in charge of the Department of Veterans Affairs. We all
admire General Shinseki for his service in the U.S. Army, but he on his
watch has presided over some of the biggest scandals at the VA in
history. It is painfully clear, no matter what you think about General
Shinseki--and I admire him for his service in the Army, but it is
painfully clear the VA needs a fresh new set of eyes, new leadership,
in order to recover, reform, and regain the confidence of America's
veterans.
President Obama still stands by his VA Secretary while nothing seems
to be happening. Yes, we read about where there is an audit here, audit
there, but we need top-to-bottom review and reform and we need to see
the VA once again regain America's confidence.
It is not just me who is saying this. One of the largest veterans
affairs organizations in America, the American Legion, has called on
Secretary Shinseki to step down and new leadership to be appointed.
Here is just another example of the administration's unserious
response to this scandal. The person who has been nominated to serve as
the VA Under Secretary of Health, Dr. Murawsky, currently oversees a VA
health care system in Illinois that was recently rocked by all-too-
familiar allegations of secret waiting lists. I note that Dr. Murawsky
spent 2 years as the direct supervisor of Sharon Helman, who worked in
the Great Lakes Health Care System before becoming Director of the
Phoenix system. As we all know, Ms. Helman was placed on administrative
leave after the Phoenix VA was charged with creating secret waiting
lists of its own.
For these reasons I asked President Obama to withdraw Dr. Murawsky's
nomination. We need a clean break. We need new leadership, a fresh set
of eyes, and we need a sense of urgency in what is a growing scandal.
As I said a moment ago, if even a fraction of these failures and abuses
were true, it would represent a national scandal of the highest order.
It is not enough for the VA Secretary to say, I am ``mad as hell.''
That doesn't solve anybody's problems. That doesn't fix what is broken
in the VA health care system. What America's veterans want and deserve
is bold reform and new leadership. President Obama has the power to
make that happen, and it is long past time for him to use it.
I yield the floor.
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