I. VA Healthcare Problems with the Media Concerning Wait Times
a. The media reported many complaints that they heard about and discovered form veterans. Many of the veterans were not receiving proper treatment in time and some were even dying. This caused alarm to both military personal and the Federal Government.
b. “VA healthcare issues consisted of hard to understand wait times, outdated scheduling software, and unrealistic scheduling metrics” (Shulkin, 2017, para 9). This resulted in older veterans (Korean and the Vietnam era) not comprehending what was going on and veterans having to be put on the backlist for medical treatment. Veterans got frustrated with the VA healthcare system and brought the word up to their congressmen, the Department
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The VA healthcare officials decided to post their veteran wait times comparing “the time the veteran requested the appointment, when they wanted the appointment, and when they were able to be seen” (Shulken, 2017, para 4). This was a start to solving the problem, but it was still too complicated for most veterans to understand and even causing VA Healthcare’s Microsoft Excel program. So, a simple method of reporting statistical data was to be introduced.
b. The VA healthcare then decided to go to words used in the DOD and in the civilian world. These words were routine and urgent. Routine care mainly consists of normal checkups, while urgent care is when a patient should see the doctor within a 24-hour period of the sickness or injury. These terms provided more of an understandable way for everyone to understand. But, it further had to be broken down into current patients and new patients.
c. Current patients and new patient’s documentation would be different. Current patient’s documentation would be as to when they saw the doctor and the veteran’s feedback of the experience. While, new veteran’s wait times would be documented of when they requested the appointment and their experience of the visit using the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS). (Shulken,
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The VA Choice Program was created to allow veterans to go to medical care in the private sector. “This concerns veterans who cannot get a medical appointment within 30 days, travel more than 40 miles, or if weather and the veteran’s medical condition inhibits them to travel” (Veterans Health Administration, n.d.). The person will still receive travel pay, but will have to pay a copay to the civilian medical treatment center once the VA receives the bill and determines the patient’s portion of the payment. This is a great benefit; the only downfall is that all the services are not paid for by the VA. Some VA doctors can refer a person to a doctor for so many appointments and that is paid for, but that happens very
In this claim it was noted that his stressor event from service was that his unit was heavily mortared one night and his best friend was killed in this attack. However, his claim was denied in December 1980 due to the fact that there was no evidence provided that was able to prove the individual was ever in combat, nor was there any evidence to prove that the mortar event ever happened. However, in April 2000, the veteran submitted military personnel records that indicated that he was indeed stationed in Vietnam from March 1970 until March 1971 with the C Company of the 554th Engineering Battalion. He also provided further information showing evidence that two members of the C Company had died during a mortar attack in January 1971. This new information helped to corroborate the information that was given during his August 1980 claim, and the VA granted him a 50 percent schedular rating for PTSD effective May 2000.
The purpose of this memo is to clarify the need for the modification of Option Year 3 of the Associated Veterans Contract to include a change in the labor categories and have an additional three months added to the period of performance. When the contract was initiated, OSP anticipated that many major VBA Transformation changes would be ramping down and in effect. For this reason, Option Period 3 included one Senior Project Manager (SPM), two Project Managers (PM), and two Project Management Assistants (PMS) for a period of nine months. As we stand, the Veterans Benefits Administration’s (VBA) Transformation changes and efforts continue to ramp up and expand.
The military’s deceptive authority on the treatment of wounded veterans carries little evidential weight. Therefore, the logo of the Wounded Warrior Project carries less credibility than originally presumed, and the effect of the image becomes less effective on each advertisement by the
If I were to test out a hypothesis related to the research conducted by Bound and Waidmann, I would focus on expenditures on the Veteran’s disability programs and the other various disability expenditures. I want to know if the increases by civilian workers minimizes the monetary support for veterans. It would be crucial to understand why veteran disability programs see a decrease in funding while other disability programs see in an increase in funding from 1950 to
Veterans and our soldiers are coming home from war or getting out of the military and when they get home they can’t afford rent or they have a mental disease from war. Homeless veterans tend to experience homelessness longer than non-veteran homeless. This should not be happening to our soldiers. This is very undesirable for our troops to come home and becoming homeless. They fight for our freedom and our rights and we repay them by becoming homeless.
Keefer Foundation: Veteran’s Outreach Program Keefer, Heather L St. Leo University Principles of Marketing MKT301 Abstract Homeless Veteran’s Outreach Program In the interest of Veterans taking care of our own, I would like to form a 501(C) Nonprofit Organization called The Keefer Foundation to assist the United States Government (USG) and the Veterans Administration in ending Veterans homelessness. Aside from the obvious benefit to our Veterans, this initiative would allow The Keefer Foundation to expand into the much-anticipated charitable works community while presenting the Foundation in a positive light within the community we serve. The Foundation
That’s why it makes perfect sense to expand and reconstruct the Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) to undertake such a massive service. Veterans don’t deserve to be treated like this, the forgotten hero’s, now the homeless, and the starving.
Mike Royko describes the Veteran’s Administration 's treatment of Leroy Bailey in his article, “A Faceless Man’s Plea” published in the Chicago Daily News. Royko’s purpose was to expose the unfair treatment of veteran’s such as Leroy Bailey. He uses a frustrated and critical tone to convey the inefficiency and hypocrisy of the Veteran’s Administration. Royko centers the beginning of his article on Leroy Bailey, a Vietnam War veteran who was sent to the infantry and was later on injured by a rocket at the age of twenty-six.
Women veterans’ use of the VA system has seem to have doubled in the last few years which has showcased the needs and preferences of women veterans. More and more women are seeking assistance with the Veterans Administration (VA) system for preventative and long term care. The core purpose of the VA is to provide the United States veterans with sensible access to quality healthcare in a veteran based atmosphere. The Veterans Administration, however has been falling short when handling women and their needs uniquely. Women have barriers with access, privacy, reproductive care, eligibility of knowledge of benefits to the proper healthcare delivery that most men that occupy the VA system doesn’t have to encounter.
On June 22, 1944, the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944 was passed. Most commonly known today as the GI Bill, it was made to provide the millions of veterans with education, financial support, and a job to help them get back on their feet. However, the Bill was faced with resistance from some people, for several reasons: some people believed it would only provide benefits for veterans with certain qualities and skills, only a small percentage of veterans would take advantage of going back to school, the disabled veterans should have first priority, it did not help widowers, will take away jobs from hard working citizens for veterans, and it was biased towards race, gender, and class. All these things caused resistance against the GI Bill and could have lead to disastrous results of it being vetoed.
The soldiers helped us gain the freedom we have today and I greatly appreciate the hard work and dedication the soldiers gave us. They fight to give us the rights we have and the way we live. We wouldn’t be the same without the soldiers who fought for us. We should greatly appreciate the things soldiers do for us and what we can and can’t do because it is keeping us safe in our country. Soldiers risk their lives everyday to give us freedom and rights that other countries don’t get the chance to have.
They argue that the government should not be spending significant amounts of money to veterans or people that just came out of war. While they acknowledge that some veterans are so psychologically damaged by their experiences in battle that they cannot function properly in society and require disability payments, other veterans, they say, may become unnecessarily dependent on veterans' services. Although, all these are valid arguments that they can make, in the long run by helping veterans out it will greatly impact not only veterans individually but the society in a positive
The Importance of Being On Time Respect is something that we all desire, but earning it is no easy task. One of the most respectable traits anyone can have, civilian or soldier can have is time management. When you report for duty, or be on time for your date, time management should be a must. By not managing your time well, you could disrupt not only the course of your day, but others as well. Keeping your word and showing up on time shows that you are reliable and appreciate the other person's time as well.
Veterans are an important part of society because they are the people who have served their country and have protected peoples rights and freedoms. Veterans are constantly struggling with illnesses, pains, and overall stress on the body and mind; they need a to be provided with free checkups and other surgeries that might be needed, they need to have round the clock support as most veterans have PTSD, and they should also be allowed to take their immediate family under their medicare plan. Veterans are the retired military personnel who have fought for the nation's freedom and the rights of people, during this fight sometimes they go through tragic events that could haunt them when they get out, also known as PTSD, so their medicare plan should cover PTSD support. Retired troops have witnessed a multitude of negative and traumatic events, whether that's losing a brother or sister of arms, getting wounded, or having to take a shot at someone else. These things could cause PTSD, a disorder where a person could undergo nightmares, heat sweats, public fears, or even thoughts and completion of suicide.
Being on time is one of the most common things you can find in any policy that is out there, whether it is for a job, school, and even the military. Being on time is one of the simplest of things that you can do to show that you have discipline, respect, and responsibility. This can also be one of the key factors that can hinder you from you reaching your goals, and completing any task that you need to complete. Missions and operations have many moving and connecting pieces that function together as a whole depending on a time sensitive plan. Being on time is probably the most common requirement in anything that you will do in life.