When sending off our men and women
to fight for our defense or interests abroad where they face the barrel of a
gun or travel along bomb-strewn roads as a course of their daily duties, it
only makes sense that upon their return we give our warriors some sort of
reward since most of them are paid peanuts for the risks they take. It isn’t
unreasonable to say that we should offer publically-funded healthcare to our
veterans. They deserve it and it should be our responsibility to maintain and
improve the health of bodies and minds that were scarified for us.
But, the current way of doing things – clinics, hospitals and doctors maintained by Veterans Affairs (VA) – shouldn’t be the only way. By following that path, we’ve achieved the cruelest of ironies: After they have survived wars and occupations overseas, the health system that was meant to protect our veterans at home could ultimately end up being the very thing that kills them.
Consider what has happened in our own backyard a few years ago. A routine inspection discovered that 716 vets who were served by the Buffalo VA Medical Center could have been exposed to HIV or hepatitis from reused insulin pens. Hospital staff did not follow the necessary protocol and failed to dispose of the one-time use pens, which in turn created a health risk similar to that of sharing a syringe.
This was not the first HIV scare to plague the VA and its patients. In early 2009, some 10,000 patients from VA hospitals in three states (Florida, Georgia, and Tennessee) were put at risk of contracting the disease after unsterilized colonoscopy equipment was repeatedly used. After checking every one of the individuals exposed to the dirty tubes, it was found that 16 of them were infected — 10 with hepatitis and six with “unspecified infections”. That’s 16 too many.
You need not be reminded of the current VA controversy, one in which administrators left veterans to have their health worsen – and even die – while put on unconscionable waiting lists, waiting lists that were purposely covered-up to make the health centers look better than they were.
Were all of this to happen in the private sector, doctors, nurses, and hospitals would lose their employment and their licenses. Not in the VA system. It is, after all, a federal bureaucracy. For all of the above mentioned matters and many more, very few heads rolled; the guilty parties kept their jobs and were rewarded handsomely.
It doesn’t make ethical and moral sense to subject our veterans to such a system, so set in its ways and so averse to change. The VA has no reason or will to change because it’s a monopoly. They have a captive audience and there is no competition allowed for it.
One of the greatest aspects of free markets and free choice is competition…the dueling participants (individuals or organizations) will always aspire to offer and/or acquire the best, most diverse and effective products or services possible. Without that motivation, limitations and suspect quality rule the day.
We need to allow our vets some of that freedom (after all, didn’t they fight for freedom?) and give them the ability to choose the care they want, from who they want, and from where they want. They shouldn’t be limited to a single source. Let them get their care from a VA medical center if they’d like. Let them get their care from a Kalieda medical center if they’d like.
The best way to achieve this is through some sort of voucher system, whereby veterans would receive government-funded insurance or their providers would receive publically-paid reimbursement. It’s a simple concept that would allow the vets to escape the ills of the VA system while pursuing the best care at some of America’s best facilities.
The voucher system would not be dissimilar to Medicaid, through which recipients receive stellar care and benefits that far rival what most privately-insured individuals get. If that Cadillac insurance system can work so well for non-contributors, why shouldn’t something similar –or better – work for those who did contribute to the greatness of our nation?
Simply put, choice and safety are two things that we can - and should - offer our veterans. What we do now affords neither. It’s time for a change…why expose them to ongoing health scares – on domestic soil, no less -- after everything they’ve done for us?
From the 14 July 2014 Lockport Union Sun and Journal
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