Trump
extends program allowing some veterans to use local
doctors, hospitals
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[April 20, 2017] By
Lisa Lambert
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump on Wednesday moved a step closer to fulfilling his campaign
promise to reform the troubled Veterans Affairs department, but some
veterans groups are concerned that the administration may be working
toward privatizing their healthcare.
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Trump signed a law extending the pilot "Veterans Choice" program,
which allows some veterans to receive healthcare from local doctors
and hospitals closer to their homes than the VA's 150 hospitals and
nearly 1,000 outpatient clinics. The law eases procedures for
reimbursing private providers and creates a system for sharing
medical records with them.
"This new law is a good start, but there is still much work to do,"
Trump said at a signing ceremony attended by VA Secretary David
Shulkin and Florida Governor Rick Scott. "We will fight each and
every day to deliver the long-awaited reforms our veterans deserve."
Trump pledged to hold a news conference next week on "all of the
tremendous things that are happening at the VA and what we've done
in terms of progress and achievement."
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Reforming the agency, rocked by a waiting-time scandal in 2014, was
one of Trump's most-repeated campaign trail promises. He has
frequently suggested having the government pay outside physicians to
provide veteran healthcare.
During his confirmation hearings, Shulkin said he supported
overhauling the agency but did not believe in privatizing it. Still,
on Tuesday the VA announced it was seeking cutting-edge treatments
from the healthcare industry for brain injuries, mental health
problems and chronic pain.
Extension of the "Veterans Choice" program could worry Democrats and
other critics that Trump and Shulkin are inching toward sending some
of the $65.6 billion the department spends annually on medical care
to corporations and private businesses.
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Conservatives calling for privatization say the VA provides medical
services to only about 45 percent of veterans, and they point to
delays and inefficiencies dogging the current system.
Some veterans groups and Democrats have warned against moving funds
away from healthcare providers with expertise in injuries and
illnesses unique to serving in the armed forces.
In a March report, the Government Accountability Office said
veterans in the Choice program still face long wait times, mostly
because cases must be referred to private contractors for
scheduling.
Last year a congressionally mandated panel of experts found the
Choice program was inefficient, but recommended establishing a
community-based healthcare system that would include private
doctors.
(Reporting by Lisa Lambert; Editing by David Gregorio)
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