How Tiffany Smiley will Help Make VA Great Again - If President Trump Listens
Every veteran who has survived catastrophic injury, such
as blindness, amputation, spinal cord injury, and severe head trauma,
will likely have a lifetime bond with the Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA), like it or not. In addition to the specialized care expertise
that VA has honed over the years, which is rivaled by very few, if any,
providers in the private sector, VA is the only place these veterans can
also receive timely access to home modifications, adaptive drivers
training, home-based care, peer mentoring, caregiver assistance, and VA
claims education and assistance.
While I am sure everyone in the room had listened to her
story and expressed compassion for her and her husband’s plight, the
danger when discussing ways to fix VA has always been the sheer
magnitude of a problem that impacts nearly nine million veterans
enrolled in the VA healthcare system. When waitlists, understaffing,
crumbling infrastructure and breaches of the public trust seem so
prevalent throughout the system; it can prove difficult to focus on the
relatively few veterans who are most vulnerable or feel the greatest
impact: the veterans who rely on VA’s specialized services. The
difficulty lies in the fact that those specialized services do not exist
in a vacuum; they are supported by the primary and tertiary components
of the VA healthcare system that are, in turn, supported by the needs of
the general veteran population being pushed to the private sector
through Choice Care. If general VA healthcare diminishes, so too might
specialized care as an unintended consequence.
Whether Mrs. Smiley had the right answer in the room that
day remains to be seen. There’s no doubt, however, that she raised the
right questions to the panel of experts around the table and the
President just by her mere presence. How can the private sector fill the
void created by failing VA facilities? How do we ensure veterans are
protected when seeking care in the private sector? Is the best solution
to shift more VA primary care to the community along with a proportional
increase in resources, such as nursing staff, shifted to VA specialized
care services that serve veterans with unique needs? How do we avoid
the pitfalls of fragmented care, particularly for veterans with severe
disabilities or mental health care needs?
Originally published on 2/13/17 by Liberty Nation: http://libertynation.com/making-va-great/