Sacrifice in Bulding 18
Hotz, Heidi, RN
Heidi.Hotz at cshs.org
Sat Mar 3 00:38:27 GMT 2007
Ken,
I too share these concerns.
I'll get right to the bottom line... the patients are suffering and not
getting the level of care they need. Based on my recall of the news, the TBI
patients are in need rehabilitation and getting nothing of the sort. Some
families have been able to have their loved ones placed them in good rehab
facilities and the patient have thrived.
I believe that the solutions will take many years to implement if at all.
In the meantime, with the severe shortage of rehabilitation facilities and
issues with insurance coverage, what is to happen to all of our military
service trauma patients with TBI that are in desperate need of
rehabilitation services?
Thank you for voicing your concerns and thoughts.
Heidi
Heidi A. Hotz, RN, Trauma Program Manager
Department of Surgery
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
8700 Beverly Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90048
Office: 310-423-8732
Cell: 310-430-2649
Pager: 310-960-6341
Fax: 310-423-0139
-----Original Message-----
From: KMATTOX at aol.com [mailto:KMATTOX at aol.com]
Sent: Thursday, March 01, 2007 5:57 PM
To: ccm-l at ccm-l.org; trauma-list at trauma.org; med-events at ccm-l.org
Subject: Sacrifice in Bulding 18
This post is medical, surgical, and health care delivery. This post is
trauma and Critical Care. Just bear with me. I am sick at heart with
what I
am discovering even as I am typing. I have been sick at heart at what I
have
been reading the past week and some of the piety, denial, finger pointing,
and excuses that I have read. My post here will address Walter Reed Army
Medical Center in Washington DC and the news of the past week. Anyone not
interested can just delete right now and spare yourself of my particular
assessment and reactions. I respect that each of you may have
encountered similar
circumstances and that each will have their own views and reactions. What
follows are mine alone.
First, I am very proud of the Military Medicine and its commitment to the
pursuit of excellence and application of new knowledge, especially to those
in
our young fighting force who give their all to defend freedom and our way of
life. The chain of survival from the time of wounding (assistance from
medic and buddy lifesaver) to the FSC to the Field Hospital to Landsduhl ,
Germany, to Walter Reed, to secondary hospitals to rehabilitation hospitals
offers
the best chance of survival and return as a functional member in society
than
at any other time in the history of military or civilian trauma care.
EVER,
ANYWHERE. We ALL must take great pride in that singular and documental
FACT. PERIOD, and this could and should be the end of the story.
However............................
Beginning over 15 years ago there were concerns regarding military
hospitals
and their governance and interaction. Several were closed, others should
have been downsized, others should have been expanded. Most should have
been
integrated with the civilian trauma centers, especially our county hospital
system across the country. However, every decision became very
politicized.
WRONG decisions at the CONGRESSIONAL, GAO, and Executive levels were made
as far back as 10 years ago. Then came the BRAC commission that made even
other damaging recommendations. NO real outside checks and balances were
imposed and MAJOR structural changes were made in locations and buildings,
often
very very politicized, and NOT what was in the best interest of the wounded
or
sick soldier. It was strongly recommended that with the closure of DC
General Hospital, Walter Reed become the Trauma Center for ALL three
services
and be located in its current location for ALL of Washington DC.
Ironically,
Walter Reed, and the politicized generals and congresspeople decided
AGAINST
Walter Reed being a Trauma Center. Thus, on 9/11 many of the most severe
injuries from the Pentagon were not taken to the three EXCELLENT trauma
centers
in the greater Washington DC area.
Decisions were made to RELOCATE and RENAME Walter Reed Hospital and this
was
led by the BRAC Commission. Deliberate decisions were made at the HIGHEST
level and by both civilians on both sides of the political aisle and by
military brass about NOT putting much money into buildings which would soon
be
replaced. BAD DECISIONS, economically and politically motivated. Some
of
the logic regarding the location, structure, function, and governance of
the
NEW Walter Reed Hospital to be located in Bethesda could be severely
criticized
when looking at the hard data about distribution, needs, function of
military medicine. BRAC prevailed and renovations of Walter Reed
suffered just
what many of our own hospitals suffer. We have a doctor problem and
difficult
quality patient care, because of decisions made by persons at a higher
lever. In the public, governmental, HMO, and military medical care,
honest
budgets to pay for what is needed for the patients known to exist almost
never
occurs. Example after example exists all across the United States.
Now fast forward to this week. Reporters expose what has been known for
at
least 5 years or longer, including known by the current surgeon general who
was today named to be interim Chief of Walter Reed after the firing of the
existing Commanding General of Walter Reed. The guilty party is NOT the
commanding general who was fired, but those who sat on the BRAC commission,
those
who refused to fund needed renovations over the past 10 years, those who
decided to move Walter Reed in favor of a NEW building in a NEW location.
The laboring doctors and nurses within the hospital knew of the problems
for
years. The last several chiefs of surgery knew of the politics and the
problems. The past 3 surgeon generals of the Army knew of the problems
and the
politics. Deliberate decisions were made to maintain the status quo.
So after the press showed rat droppings and leaking roofs, and complaining
soldiers just back from Iraq, someone had to be come the sacrificial lamb.
FIRE the Commanding General. How many times have you seen this in
civilian
and in county hospital across the country. This is in hopes that no one
REOPENS the needed analysis of the BRAC Commission. This in hopes that no
one
REOPENS the decades long debate about renovations in military medicine to
create a Uniformed Services Health System, much like the unified medical
training
FOR ALL SERVICES now in existence at the Uniformed Services University for
the Health Sciences. A grand example of cooperation for a needed
mission.
As a civilian observer, I am very proud to have observed what the laboring
doctors and nurses and technicians in the trenches have done for our wounded
servicewomen and servicemen. I have been saddened at many of the
politicized
military medical decisions often made by civilians with a conflict of
interest at the Congressional, GAO, Civil Service, and Executive Branch
Levels. I
have been seeing such occur for the past 30 years. Fortunately, using
tenacity, medical tape, interaction with the civilian trauma center
advances, and
putting up with the recurrent red tape, fantastic medical care has been
rendered.
If I were to FIRE someone, IF I were to question anything after this week,
I would do a root cause analysis and I would start with the Bell Commission
and the BRAC report. I personally would throw it OUT and start all over
with a blue ribbon mixed civilian, military, and business community
personnel
and do for Military Medicine what the Flexner Report did for Medical
Education
almost 100 years ago.
The answers are NOT TriCare. The answers are not to close military
hospital. The answers are NOT to fire the Commanding General of Walter
Reed who
inherited a mess of a building and no real resources to fix the problems.
The
answers are not to point fingers to those in the trenches, but to look for
the
real culprits who put this problem into motion over the past several
decades.
Congress will hear next week hearings on the Military TOP DOC to be
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs. This position should
be elevated
to Deputy Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs. In the Pentagon at the
Joint Chiefs of Staff Level, there should be a 4 star DOCTOR General who is
OVER all surgeon generals and have HIGHEST LEVEL POLICY making power.
Such
has not been present for DECADES. We suffered in some of the deployment
assignments due to the old structure, but that is beyond the scope of this
post.
Doctors are not just technicians without planning, process, and policy
brain
capabilities. They often have tremendous insight to help the politicians
and the line officers in the military and in civilian health care delivery
alike.
In both civilian and military health care delivery we are in the midst of a
perfect storm- leading to quality health care falling apart and for a lot
of
reasons (Every Trauma Program Director can tell tales of woe concerning
insurance companies, reluctance to take trauma call, etc. etc. ). The
root cause
is not at the trench level it is at much higher levels where the concepts
and the foundation is FAULTED. This example today with Walter Reed Army
Medical Center Commanding Generals Firing is just a symptom of a much more
serious
disease.
Kenneth L. Mattox, MD
Houston
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