In the USA our VA Health Care System is a government funded support agency to provide health care to veterans of the armed forces.
The quality of the services they provide has recently been sub-par with the civilian counterparts.
There are facilities strewn across all 50 states.
Personally I have utilized 6 different facilities in different locations.
Of the six, only one was quality on par with basic civilian care.
For a government supported entity you would think that with today's technology all the different facilities would be standardized and able to communicate with each other. A patients records would transfer from facility to facility like they do when one is serving in active duty status and transferring duty stations. They Don't.
You might think that quality of care would reflect the same attention to detail and high standards as the military's strict standards. After all, The facility is there to support military trained people. They Don't.
You might expect basic routines from your primary care physician like an physical examination. Listen to your heart beat, check your lungs and abdomen with a stethoscope, look at your tongue, ears, check your neck glands and so on.
What happens is the Dr you are given gets on his/her computer, looks at your test results and tells you what they see. They prescribe you drugs and tell you how to use them. They talk with you a bit and then spend the rest of the hour typing on the computer while you sit in the chair. At or near the end of the hour you are ushered out and told to make a new appointment in six months.
When you return in six months you need to reintroduce yourself to the Dr because there is no familiarity in their eyes when you look at them. The pull up your record and it all repeats.
When they do issue you new medicine and it is mailed to you it is two weeks before you get that medicine.
If you have an on-going condition or a occurrence of a condition all past treatments and medicines at other facilities are unavailable without a special allowance and a significant period of time. The Dr cannot just click into your medical history within the VA as a whole.
Often times this leads to a number of tests that you must submit to again and again. When those retest results come back, the treatments reflect what the doctor decides not what worked well for you in the past from the same tests. Many Doctors assign medication on what they assume is the problem without acknowledging what you know worked in the past.
I have been incorrectly diagnosed with 8 different aliments by 8 different doctors and not one has effectively treated my complaint.
I don't even know what it is that needs to be treated because they have called it so many different things.
It has been years since I held normal medical insurance. Being disabled restricts my ability to afford civilian health care due to living costs. Support for veterans is low cost and I consider it a benefit that I earned when I signed my life to my country. I do appreciate the offer. I just think that if the country I served honorably is going to offer something this important they should at least have their **** together?
[/rant]
I ask my fellow veterans, Have you been satisfied with your experiences with the VA Heath Care Network?
Do you use MyHealtheVet website?
Do you have any ideas on how it could be fixed?
Do you even think it is broken?
How would your experience there measure up to your experience of your time in the service?
How does it compare with your experience with civilian health care?
Thank you for your service!
Remember the Fallen...
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