For First Time, VA Releases Internal Quality Rankings For Clinics
The move comes after a USA Today investigation reveals the rankings. In other news, ProPublica files a suit against the agency saying it failed to turn over information on Agent Orange.
USA Today:
VA Reverses Course, Releases Health Care Quality Data
The Department of Veterans Affairs has quietly released quality-of-care ratings for its medical centers across the country, despite years of refusing to share them with the public. The move follows a USA TODAY investigation that revealed ratings for 146 VA medical centers for the first time earlier this month. VA Secretary Bob McDonald complained at the time that their publication across the USA TODAY Network caused “unwarranted distress” to veterans and could dissuade them from getting care. (Slack, 12/20)
ProPublica:
ProPublica Files Lawsuit Seeking Agent Orange Documents From The VA
ProPublica has sued the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, claiming the agency failed to promptly process a request for correspondence with a consultant about Agent Orange, a toxic defoliant used during the Vietnam War. The lawsuit, filed late Friday in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., alleges that the delays violated the Freedom of Information Act, a 50-year-old law whose mission is to provide the public with information about government operations. (Ornstein, 12/20)
Read ProPublica's recent coverage on the issue: Agent Orange A Poison Seeping Into Family Trees, Vets Worry
And in other news —
Bloomberg:
Trump VA Contenders Said To Include Cleveland Clinic’s Cosgrove
Cleveland Clinic Chief Executive Officer Delos “Toby” Cosgrove and Luis Quinonez, head of a company that provides health-care services to the military, are being considered by President-elect Donald Trump to lead the Veterans Affairs Department, according to a person familiar with the process. Both men were meeting with Trump Tuesday at the president-elect’s estate in Palm Beach, Florida, where he’s spending the Christmas holiday. (Jacobs and Pettypiece, 12/20)
The Associated Press:
Trump Hosts Candidates For Key Veterans Affairs Post
President-elect Donald Trump met Tuesday met with candidates for his unfilled Cabinet positions, including prospective hires to run the Department of Veterans Affairs, a beleaguered agency that the Republican businessman has vowed to overhaul. Vice President-elect Mike Pence met with members of his incoming national security team a day after acts of violence rocked the world. (Lemire, 12/20)