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April 18th, 2008

Why are reformers destroying Veterans' health computer system?

Posted by Dana Blankenhorn @ 7:28 am

Categories: General, Hospital IT, IT Management, Medical IT, Networking, Open Source, Physician Information, Windows

Tags: Agency, Hero, U.S. Congress, Microsoft Windows Vista, Health Care, Computer, Roger Maduro, VA, Microsoft Windows Vista (Longhorn), Vertical Industries

Roger Maduro, VistA & Open Healthcare editorRoger Maduro (right) doesn’t look like a hero. Like most heroes he never sought the status, just tried to do right and shine a light on what works.

What works, he thinks is VistA, and the Veterans Administration system that computer code supports. In shining the light of his small newsletter on recent attempts to harm both, he has become a hero in some eyes.

Mine for starters.

In the January-February issue of VistA & Open Healthcare News (PDF), Maduro details an ongoing crisis at the agency and how the VA was moved to eventually buy proprietary software from Cerner to run its labs.

It started in 2005 with a huge budget increase, to $1.2 billion, aimed at centralizing the agency’s IT operations. Maduro writes the Republican Congress pushed the reorganization through over the agency’s opposition.

Maduro calls the VA the most cost-effective health care network in the country, based partly on the dedication of its staff and partly on VistA, a decentralized IT infrastructure whose software was made public domain.

Under orders from Congress what worked was ripped out in favor of a proprietary replacement, Maduro writes, by people with no VistA experience.

In his article Maduro quotes Scott Shreeve, who co-founded Medsphere based on VistA code, as saying VistA is being replaced by a “best of breed approach” favoring proprietary software companies.

I did some Web searches to find out why. The answer appears to be politics.

Tommy Bass, Marine veteranTo put a human face on what follows, may I present Vietnam-era Marine, thrice-wounded veteran Tommy Bass, a friend and hero of mine.

Cerner won its VA contract while greatly increasing its lobby expenditures in Washington. The company is also accused of using political contributions to win contracts in its home state of Missouri.

Rep. Stephen Buyer, who chaired the Veterans Affairs Committee when the reorganization was pushed through, counts many medical lobbies among his biggest contributors. He has called VA centralization a model for other agencies.

Some veterans’ groups see a plan to completely privatize the VA, criticizing Democrats as well as Republicans.

I contacted Maduro about this story. He wrote that over the last few weeks the VA has begun circling the wagons:

Over the past couple of weeks the VA has issued orders that no one is to speak to the press. In addition, from this point on no one from the VA can give any presentation at any meeting of any kind without first clearing it through the office of communication. All presentation materials will also have to be vetted by said office.

Maduro admits he’s a big backer of the VA. “The VA has been not only providing the best medical care in the country, it has been doing it for about 1/3 of the cost of Medicaid/Medicare.”

As to how to fix the present problems, he writes, a Federated computing model, as proposed by Undersecretary Jonathan Perlin, can work.

“There would have been no crisis if Congress had allowed the VA to continue with their Federated Model plan, which they were carrying out.”

Now, however, the VA’s IT infrastructure is going down for hours at a time, and without any paper back-up care is hampered whenever that happens, Maduro says. (This actually happened at Atlanta last year, when I visited Tommy following a cancer operation.)

It may already be too late to turn back, Maduro concludes.

The problem I see is that the personnel re-organization has been so massive and so many good people have been purged, that I don’t know if the VA has retained enough key personnel that understands how this all works to reverse course.

Dana BlankenhornDana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist since 1978, and has covered technology since 1982. He launched the Interactive Age Daily, the first daily coverage of the Internet to launch with a magazine, in September 1994. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

Email Dana Blankenhorn

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 28 Talkback(s)
VA Can Profit from Others Successes
The points brought up here need to be further punctuated in that VistA was developed from a standard tool set which is generally available, and the applications were built by the Subject Matter Expert... (Read the rest)
Posted by: BaronMind Posted on: 10/16/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
...  Linux User 147560 | 04/18/08
Exactly! I am in the same boat with you  Ole Man | 04/05/09
RE: Why are reformers destroying Veterans' health computer system?  notdanablankenhorn | 04/18/08
What saves money..  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 04/18/08
WorldVistA will update the lab package  flydoc40 | 04/19/08
The VA, contrary to the bad press, delivers the best health care in the US  Ole Man | 04/05/09
RE: Why are reformers destroying Veterans' health computer system?  scottmace2002 | 04/18/08
Correction  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 04/18/08
Dana did not talk to the VA  notdanablankenhorn | 04/18/08
Sorry you don't like the story  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 04/18/08
My issue is with poor journalism  notdanablankenhorn | 04/18/08
Well at least I know where you're coming from  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 04/19/08
Why talk to someone who cannot go on record?  ftrotter | 04/19/08
The "VA" is NOT a person  Ole Man | 04/05/09
Agenda against Cerner?  brianburnham@... | 04/18/08
I have no agenda against Cerner  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 04/18/08
This is not a "against company" issue  ftrotter | 04/19/08
Fred makes a good point about open source  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 04/19/08
VA Can Profit from Others Successes  BaronMind | 10/16/09
You nailed it  Ole Man | 04/05/09
Maduro responds  ramaduro | 04/18/08
RE: Why are reformers destroying Veterans' health computer system?  ftrotter | 04/19/08
RE: Why are reformers destroying Veterans' health computer system?  hvb | 04/21/08
Would they destroy vet healthcare and tax savings?  flydoc40 | 04/21/08
VA leadership are not crooks  hvb | 04/22/08
Yes, "Consider the role of industry and its lobbyists"  Ole Man | 04/05/09
Now you're getting the idea!  Ole Man | 04/05/09
RE: Why are reformers destroying Veterans' health computer system?  ramaduro | 04/23/08

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