It's pouring rain in the Veterans Affairs (VA) healthcare scandal, with a fifth location now accused of gaming the system to conceal unacceptable wait times. Allegations and whistleblowers have emerged in Arizona, Colorado, and at twoTexas facilities. Now add Wyoming to the list. CBS News reports:
VA Secretary Eric Shinseki has resisted calls for his resignation as this scandal has gained steam, ordering a nationwide audit to review these practices. But will its findings do any good? CBS reports that the Cheyenne incident was reported by an informant last year, yet it took media scrutiny six months later for anything to happen:
As I've written previously, accountability is in short supply these days. Meanwhile, in Texas, another tentacle of the VA's appalling health system has come to light. When conservatives warn about poor quality of care and treatment rationing under government-run and -operated systems, this is the sort of thing we're talking about (content warning -- via the Examiner):
No further comment is necessary. This is an abomination. Where else are these ghoulish guidelines in place? It took one former doctor to step forward and expose the wait list scheme in Phoenix, which has led to a steady stream of similar revelations across the country. Are other facilities denying veterans basic screenings and care for budgetary reasons? I'll leave you with this observation from Iraq veteran and wounded warrior JR Salzman, who remembers when the media and Democrats used the Walter Reed scandal to bludgeon President Bush:
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