Even with the most efficacious treatments, a high-functioning intensive care unit needs state-of-theart technology and equipment. In a long-awaited announcement, Dr. Shulkin reported on June 5 that of 2 competing modalities to revive the VA’s ailing electronic health record system—the brain of our critical care patient—rather than repair the moribund CPRS, the VA will receive a transplant of the DoD MHS Genesis. Critical care, especially when delivered in a combat zone, requires difficult triage decisions. The secretary has made similar tough resource allocation decisions, determining that some of the VA’s oldest and most debilitated facilities will not be sustained in their present form.
I am near the end of this editorial and still do not have a diagnosis. Pundits, politicians, and policy specialists all have their differential diagnosis as well as veterans groups and VA employees.“Bloated bureaucracy” is the diagnosis from many of these VA critics. Dr. Shulkin proposed a remedy for this disease: He plans to consolidate the VA headquarters.
Even more important, for those who believe the VA should not have a DNR but be allowed to recover, what does the physician who holds the VA’s life in his hands believe is the prognosis for this 86-year-old institution? Dr. Shulkin expressed the hope that the VA can recover its health, saying he is “confident that we will be able turn VA into the organization veterans and their families deserve, and one that America can take pride in.” The most vehement of VA’s opponents would say that pouring additional millions of dollars into such a moribund entity is futile care. Yet the secretary and thousands of VA patients, staff, and supporters believe that the agency that President Lincoln created at the end of the bloodiest war in U.S. history still has value and can be restored to meaningful service for those who have, who are, and who will place their lives on the line for their country.