VA Secretary: Early Intervention Kept Veteran COVID-19 Cases Down

While the number of COVID-19-positive veterans is rising, hospitalizations have been reduced by VA preventive measures.

By Laura Rice & Joy DiazJuly 16, 2020 3:13 pm, , ,

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs credits early preventive measures at its 170 medical facilities for keeping more beds available for civilian COVID-19 patients in Texas and nationwide.

“We were the first ones to take dramatic steps,” VA Secretary Robert Wilkie told Texas Standard in an interview that aired on Thursday. “We stopped elective surgeries. We stopped visitors and family from coming into the hospitals.”

The VA provides health care to 9 million military veterans including half a million Texans.

Although the number of COVID-19 positive cases among military veterans has been rising, the hospitalizations have been lower than in the civilian population.

“We’ve been lucky in Texas and across the country,” Wilkie said.

In Texas, the VA has opened up its hospitals in Harlingen and San Antonio to civilian patients, in addition to offering bed space at its newest hospital in Garland.

The VA’s nursing homes have been dealing with much lower COVID-19 caseloads than civilian nursing homes because, Wilkie said, unlike civilian facilities, the 134 nursing homes the VA operates have more than one doctor on staff.

“We treat every patient in our nursing homes as an acute-care patient,” Wilkie explained. “We have a different approach than most nursing homes.”

When the coronavirus outbreak began last spring, the VA quickly told veterans to call the agency and stay home. That way, VA staff could call back and quickly assess who needed to come in immediately. That reduced outbreaks in waiting rooms and among staff, Wilkie said.

Wilkie also commented on the murder of Army Specialist Vanessa Guillen who disappeared from Fort Hood in April. Her remains were found earlier this month. A fellow soldier who was considered a suspect killed himself. Before her death, Guillen told family members she had been sexually harassed.

Wilkie told the Standard that staying silent was no longer an option – that veterans and active-duty military should come forward if they know of incidents involving sexual assault or harassment.

“We want people to come forward,” he said. “We have to be on guard so that no family goes through what that family is going through with that soldier from Fort Hood. It’s an American tragedy.”

Web story by Terri Langford.