Military members have? If you are an active duty member or dependent you have free healthcare. So are our government officials saying that the military’s healthcare system is corrupt?
If we treated the universal healthcare system like a PPO, would it be corrupt?
Update:I work for TriWest Healthcare Alliance, and yes here in Alaska the VA, Airforce base hspt., and Army hsptl are state of the art and top of the line standards.
However, I said Active duty not retirees which I will agree at times are treated wrong.
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You mean some of the polititions who also get free heath care along with all gov workers and big corps. that use the tax write off.
But that isnt what they are doing. The whole problem is some people get to use their employers plan and some people get this govnt plan and some people have their own plan. It is just going to cost all of us tax payers. If universal Health Care is what they are going to do, then they need to just do it and a model after the military would be fine by me. I just question the expertise of the people they get to work in medicine with national health care. The people in the military doing health care are there because they want to be. AKA they are not really in it for the money. Future doctors are more likely in my opinion, to be less qualified because some of the genuinely genious people who could be helping people, will become lawyers and sue because thats where the money is.
Just visit a VA hospital... You will be disgusted. Its atrocious to say the least. Yet these people want to follow this same system. If you want a good representation of how the health care will look just look at:
Cuba
Canada
UK
Hawaii
Mass.
All have socialized medicine and all are in terrible shape.
what the heck are you talking about? First of all military members have awful health care, that why most of them buy a private plan...and secondly, how do you figure it like UHC??? It is like having health insurance through any job....if the military is like UHC then so is every work place.
I guess you are only thinking of the "free" part though.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5...
VA silent on compensating for endoscopic mistakes
By BILL POOVEY (AP) – Jul 2, 2009
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP) — An attorney for veterans potentially exposed to HIV and other infections by colonoscopies at three Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals said his clients are waiting to hear if they will be compensated for mistakes that led to congressional hearings and new VA spending on patient safety.
A spokeswoman for the VA declined to comment about prospects for compensation. Katie Roberts said the more than 10,000 veterans who have been getting follow-up blood checks since February have the option of filing a complaint in a claim just like other VA patients.
She said the VA has been advising the affected patients that they have the option of filing a claim.
But Nashville lawyer Mike Sheppard describes that claims process as cumbersome, particularly for veterans who have tested positive for HIV and hepatitis.
"Some of these veterans are scared," said Sheppard, who has about 50 of the VA's former endoscopic patients as clients. He said complaints about VA medical care must be filed under the federal torts claim law.
Sheppard said his clients are telling him that VA officials have sent them letters and in some cases have contacted them by telephone "stating they are sending them some documents and they will be considering some compensation."
Roberts said the VA has made no offer of any special compensation. She declined to comment about any potential benefit for the affected veterans beyond continuing to provide them medical care. Roberts said Thursday that she is trying to provide VA records on medical complaints.
An update on the VA's Web site shows that a seventh veteran has tested positive for HIV among the former patients exposed to mistakes with rigging or cleaning endoscopic equipment at VA hospitals in Murfreesboro, Tenn.; Miami and Augusta, Ga.
Another 12 veterans among those who have heeded VA warnings to get follow-up blood checks have tested positive for hepatitis B and 36 others have tested positive for hepatitis C.
The VA and independent doctors say those rates of infection are far below what would normally be found among similar populations. A top VA doctor has said there is no way to trace the infections to the VA — or the mistakes he described as human error — but some medical experts disagree.
A report by the VA inspector general, presented to congressional oversight panels, suggests the VA has more widespread problems. Surprise inspections in May found that only 43 percent of VA medical centers had standard operating procedures in place for endoscopic equipment used in colonoscopies and other procedures and could show they properly trained their staffs for using the devices.
Roberts has said the VA is releasing $26 million from reserve funds to buy new equipment to improve the cleaning of endoscopes and other reusable medical devices.
The VA on its Web site says it "will continue to notify, inform, and treat all potentially impacted veterans, regardless of risk, cause, or harm. Many people incur injury as a result of medical errors that could have been prevented - Unfortunately, many health care organizations do not voluntarily disclose their problems to patients or the broader public. In contrast, it is VA's policy to actively seek out quality problems, discuss them openly, and tackle them head on."
U.S. Rep. Harry Mitchell, D-Ariz., who is chairman of the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs subcommittee that held a June 16 hearing and has directed the VA's inspector general to further investigate whether the agency is properly using and sterilizing equipment, said in a statement Thursday that "we need to do right by affected veterans."
Mitchell said in an e-mail statement that it would be inappropriate for him to comment on "pending litigation."
Some veterans were warned in February to get tested, and more were alerted in March when the Miami hospital backtracked on its previous conclusion that it didn't have a problem.
Michael Priest, a 59-year-old Navy veteran who had a colonoscopy at a Murfreesboro VA hospital last year, has said he received a telephone call from a VA nurse who told him his follow-up blood test showed he had HIV. A week later, he was informed a second test by the VA was negative.
Priest said the first call left both him and his wife terrified and he no longer trusts the VA to provide his medical care.
"The immediate terror of that situation has lessened," Priest told The Associated Press. "The fear has subsided due to the independent testing especially. We are calmer about that fear situation just a little bit angry that it even had to happen."
Priest said Thursday that the VA should compensate veterans whose positive tests for infections can be traced to the hospital mistakes.
"That still isn't the main point a