As we approach Memorial Day, when we’re meant to pause,
think about and thank the men and women who’ve made great sacrifices in the
defense of our country, it saddens and infuriates me that those on whom we
depend can’t count on us for much of anything.
It’s bad enough that the military can’t discharge
veterans who have physical or psychological scars from their tours in Iraq and
Afghanistan fast enough, so the services don’t have to finance and provide
support for them. But it turns out that the Veterans Administration medical
system—which is supposed to guarantee them care for life—has apparently been a
lot better at delaying
treatment and falsifying records than it has at actually providing the care
these people deserve.
This isn’t just some rogue facility doing it, either.
Administrators in VA hospitals in Washington, Texas, Nevada, Colorado, New
Mexico, Arizona and other states have systematically instructed schedulers to
book medical appointments for months out, but to classify those appointments as
having been requested by the patient, so the hospital’s stats look good.
So good, in fact, that facility senior managers get
performance bonuses. Monetary bonuses. They profit
from these practices.
But veterans, on the other hand, die while waiting for those
appointments.
President Obama and Secretary for Veterans Affairs Eric
Shinseki have pronounced themselves “mad
as hell” about the revelations, although it’s not clear how much of a
surprise this can be, since these practices have been reported by
whistle-blowers for more than five years. And they are preceded by conditions
in what should be one of the flagship military care facilities, Walter Reed
Hospital, being
worse than you’d expect to find in a facility in Central African Republic.
Investigations have been launched. Congress is on its
hind legs. And blah, blah, blah.
You know—the harm’s way into which we send our defenders
is not supposed to include the systems that were established to support them. I
am ashamed that the people we elected to office—Congress and Executive branch
alike—think they can cut corners and score points off the wounds suffered by
the men and women of our armed forces.
We should keep that in mind on Monday, when our pols show
up at Memorial Day parades. On their way to fundraising events.
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