kenmar
11-21-2002, 08:17 AM
VA Improves Funding Process for Medical Facilities
WASHINGTON (Nov. 20, 2002) - Secretary of Veterans Affairs Anthony
J. Principi has announced an overhaul of the five-year-old system that
determines how much federal funding the regional health care networks of the
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) receive for treating veterans.
"Eligible veterans should receive the same level of care, regardless
of where they live or what their medical needs are," said Principi. "By
improving the fairness of the process and focusing better on patients with
severe disabilities, these changes will strengthen the ability of VA clinics
and hospitals to meet the needs of their patients."
VA allocates funds to its medical facilities through 21 regional
networks. Allocations are based on the number of veterans and the severity
of their illnesses under a system established in 1997 called the Veterans
Equitable Resource Allocation (VERA).
"We've carefully considered many options," Principi said. "The
changes I have approved are sound ones taken from recommendations by the
General Accounting Office and the Rand Corporation."
The latest refinements will allow VA to:
* More accurately tie VA funding for networks to the complexity of
care received by patients, with per-patient funds ranging from about $263 to
more than $60,000;
* Provide more funding to networks for the most severely ill
patients;
* Eliminate the need for special mid-year funding supplements for
networks by addressing the issues that previously led to such requests; and
* Contain and manage workload growth.
VA's funding system continually undergoes refinements and
evaluations to address issues such as patient classification and pricing
structure.
VERA was part of a broader plan to transform VA's health care system
from a confederation of individual medical centers and clinics focused
primarily on inpatient care to a fully integrated system that expands
primary and ambulatory health care.
Under the VERA system, funding for medical facilities is provided by
21 regional networks, called Veterans Integrated Service Networks (VISNs),
which administer the health care services VA provides to the nation's 25
million veterans.
WASHINGTON (Nov. 20, 2002) - Secretary of Veterans Affairs Anthony
J. Principi has announced an overhaul of the five-year-old system that
determines how much federal funding the regional health care networks of the
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) receive for treating veterans.
"Eligible veterans should receive the same level of care, regardless
of where they live or what their medical needs are," said Principi. "By
improving the fairness of the process and focusing better on patients with
severe disabilities, these changes will strengthen the ability of VA clinics
and hospitals to meet the needs of their patients."
VA allocates funds to its medical facilities through 21 regional
networks. Allocations are based on the number of veterans and the severity
of their illnesses under a system established in 1997 called the Veterans
Equitable Resource Allocation (VERA).
"We've carefully considered many options," Principi said. "The
changes I have approved are sound ones taken from recommendations by the
General Accounting Office and the Rand Corporation."
The latest refinements will allow VA to:
* More accurately tie VA funding for networks to the complexity of
care received by patients, with per-patient funds ranging from about $263 to
more than $60,000;
* Provide more funding to networks for the most severely ill
patients;
* Eliminate the need for special mid-year funding supplements for
networks by addressing the issues that previously led to such requests; and
* Contain and manage workload growth.
VA's funding system continually undergoes refinements and
evaluations to address issues such as patient classification and pricing
structure.
VERA was part of a broader plan to transform VA's health care system
from a confederation of individual medical centers and clinics focused
primarily on inpatient care to a fully integrated system that expands
primary and ambulatory health care.
Under the VERA system, funding for medical facilities is provided by
21 regional networks, called Veterans Integrated Service Networks (VISNs),
which administer the health care services VA provides to the nation's 25
million veterans.