| Veterans
News Flash 
VA
Reviews Maintenance Needs for
All Facilities
March 21, 2007
Most
Issues Involve “Normal Wear and Tear,” Are
Being Addressed
WASHINGTON
-- To ensure the 1,400 hospitals, clinics, nursing
homes and other facilities where veterans receive
health care from the Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA) are in top-notch physical condition, the
Department’s senior physician said a
special review of all facilities concludes most
deficiencies involve “normal wear and tear.”
“The overwhelming majority of issues identified
by this special review are the kinds of items you
would expect to find -- and see being addressed
-- in an organization with nearly 150 million square
feet of space where 1 million patients come each
week,” said Dr. Michael Kussman, VA’s
Acting Under Secretary for Health.
Secretary of Veterans Affairs Jim Nicholson ordered
the review March 7 in the wake of reports about
poor physical condition in some non-VA health care
facilities housing wounded and injured service
members.
Kussman
said the Department’s $519 million
maintenance budget for this year, coupled with
$573 million proposed for next year, should take
care of any maintenance shortcomings. If further
funds are needed, VA pledged to work with congressional
committees to identify how to best address those
needs.
“VA facilities are inspected more frequently
than any other health care facilities in the nation,” Kussman
said. “We will continue to monitor closely
the progress of corrective action identified by
this special report.”
Kussman noted that most of the maintenance issues
identified in the special report did not involve
areas providing direct patient care.
VA operates the largest integrated health care
system in the United States, with 155 hospitals,
nearly 900 outpatient clinics and 135 nursing homes.
VA treated more than 5.4 million patients last
year, accounting for about 55 million outpatient
visits and 600,000 hospitalizations.
VA’s health care system has been widely
cited as the best in the country, with accolades
ranging from Harvard University, which last year
awarded VA the prestigious “Innovations in
Government” award for its computerized patient
records, to major news media outlets, such as U.S.
News & World Report, which said in a headline
last summer, “VA Hospitals Are Models of
Top-Notch Care.”
SOURCE:
VNIS
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