|
Who
We Are
Articles
Upcoming
Events
Past
Events
Downloads
Links
No
Child Left Behind
Political
Cartoons
Contact
Us
|
Pentagon Is Probing Veterans Home
Steve Vogel and Michael E. Ruane, Washington Post
March 22, 2007
Reports
of a rising death rate and rooms spattered with blood, urine and feces
at the Armed Forces Retirement Home prompted the Pentagon yesterday to
begin investigating conditions at the veterans facility in Northwest
Washington.
The Government Accountability Office warned the Pentagon this week that
residents of the home "may be at risk" in light of allegations of
severe health-care problems. Residents have been admitted to Walter
Reed Army Medical Center with "the most serious type of pressure sores"
and, in one case, with maggots in a wound, according to a GAO letter
sent to the Defense Department.
Timothy Cox, the chief operating officer for the retirement home, said
yesterday that the accusations are "without merit," and he blasted the
GAO for making "inflammatory allegations" without investigating them.
The reports came from medical personnel who treat residents at the
historic veterans home, formerly known as the U.S. Soldiers' and
Airmen's Home. The facility, run by an independent federal agency under
the jurisdiction of the Department of Defense, is home to more than
1,100 enlisted retirees, many of them veterans of World War II, Korea
and Vietnam.
The Pentagon sent a team of four doctors on an unscheduled visit
yesterday morning to view the conditions and speak to officials and
residents. The team was appointed Tuesday in response to the letter
sent a day earlier to Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates by David M.
Walker, the comptroller general and head of the GAO.
The letter reported allegations that inspectors received during its
"oversight and monitoring" of the home, mandated by Congress in 2005.
According to Walker's letter, the allegations include a "rising number
of resident deaths," an increase in the rates of admission to Walter
Reed, resident rooms befouled with human waste, and veterans suffering
from bedsores.
"GAO believes that these allegations should be examined because AFRH
residents -- a vulnerable population of elderly, enlisted, military
retirees -- may be at risk," Walker wrote.
Those who raised questions about the medical care have suffered
retaliation from the private company that manages the veterans home,
the medical personnel told GAO investigators.
During a tour of the home yesterday, Cox confirmed that a resident had
been found in August with maggots in a leg wound. Cox said the man was
"noncompliant and combative," and did not want his dressing changed.
Cox said the dressing should have been changed anyway. Eight employees
were eventually fired because of the incident, he said. The man, who
was 87, later died of causes unrelated to the wound. "It was an
isolated incident," Cox said.
Cox said the reports of human waste in the rooms may have stemmed from
an outbreak in February of highly contagious norovirus, which infected
more than 100 residents. "When you're sick with vomiting and diarrhea,
sometime you miss the john," he said.
Cox said the home's death rate has gone up from about 13 to 15 a month,
but he attributed the rise in part to a new hospice program.
In addition, the home received an influx of veterans after Hurricane
Katrina damaged a sister institution for Navy veterans in Gulfport,
Miss. Cox said the Washington home now has 150 residents requiring
assisted living, twice as many as before the hurricane.
Sens. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.) sent a joint
letter to Gates on Tuesday saying they were "dismayed" by the GAO
letter and calling on Defense "to immediately undertake an independent
investigation. "
The home on North Capitol Street, founded in 1851, has long been funded
by a 50-cent paycheck deduction paid by all enlisted personnel. Cuts in
the size of the military force after the end of the Cold War decreased
income for the home. By the late 1990s, the home was in danger of
bankruptcy.
Cox was hired from private industry in 2002 to bring down costs. In the
past three years, the workforce has been cut from 736 to 447, and the
operating budget has been reduced from $76 million to $54.7 million,
according to figures provided by the home. The maintenance staff has
shrunk from 127 to nine, despite a rising population, according to the
senators' letter.
A group of veterans living there filed a federal class-action suit
against the home and the Defense Department in 2005, claiming budget
cuts have harmed care for residents. Court-ordered mediation talks are
to begin next month, said Martin Cody, a resident.
Several residents interviewed yesterday said they were generally happy.
Some complained of long lines at the medical clinic in the mornings and
said they thought the home lacked enough doctors.
"You cannot make everybody happy," said George DeMonfort-Proksa, 82, a
veteran of the Polish air force and the U.S. Army who has lived at the
home 19 years. "You'll always find people who will be miserable."
This archive consists of a topically organized selection of
articles culled by members of the Counter-Recruitment List Serve from printed
publications and web sites. The archive is not complete. We have chosen
material relevant to the work of Eugene,
Oregon’s Committee for Countering
Military Recruitment that we think may be of use to others individuals and
groups with similar goals.
Because our web site is public, personal comments about the
articles and (frequent) corrections of reporters’ errors are also not included.
If an article interests you, we encourage you to return to the
Counter-Recruitment List Serve and put the article’s headline into the search
line, which should bring up (often wise and useful) commentary and corrections.
If you do not belong to the List Serve, it can be found at counter-recruitment@yahoogroups.com
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the articles
on this site are posted without profit to those who have expressed prior
interest in receiving the included information for research and educational
purposed.
|