Posted on Sep 3, 2015
SPC Jan Allbright, M.Sc., R.S.
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Dozens of patients were moved, new-patient admissions was canceled and some medical procedures were postponed after a monsoon storm damaged the beleaguered Carl T. Hayden VA Medical Center, according to The Arizona Republic.

Don Taylor, acting associate director of the hospital, told The Republic torrential rains Monday night, along with "almost hurricane-force winds," hammered the main building's west and south sides. Damage was also reported at the Phoenix Zoo, where several trees blew down.

Hospital spokeswoman Jean Schaefer told The Republic the storm caused damage in the Intensive Care Unit, the Emergency Department, inpatient wards and other areas. She said at least 67 beds were out of service, and some patients were transferred to other hospitals.

Schaefer told The Republic most of the affected veterans were moved to other locations in the medical center, but some were transferred to surrounding community hospitals. The water impact was described as “pervasive,” affecting most hospital floors and about 40 rooms. No cost estimate was available for the damage, TheRepublic reported.

“We are not taking any new admissions,” Schaefer told the newspaper. “If people come to the ER and need admission, we’ll stabilize them and find another hospital for them.”

Closed areas of the facility will not reopen until construction work is completed and inspections are passed. Taylor told The Republic he hopes work will be done within a week.

The hospital has been the epicenter of a national controversy over veterans’ health care since April 2014, when whistle-blowers disclosed that patients had died while awaiting care in a backlogged and fraudulent appointment system, according to The Republic.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2015/09/03/storm-damages-beleaguered-phoenix-va-hospital/71626564/
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Responses: 2
GySgt Paul Hays
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I am very disheartened at the inability of this hospital's leadership (such as it is...) to budget for reality, versus the pie-in-the-sky items they have in the past. Suspect items:
1. Solar-power-providing covered parking - Done when more parking was already an issue, years ago, and has now been partially torn down to provide for a parking garage, worsening the already intolerable parking situation.
2. Motion-sensing trash compactors for the cafeteria - seven of them. Really?
3. Windows/ceilings not up to dealing with wind-driven rain. Twice. In one 30-day period. This place was built in '49. Any upgrades budgeted?
4. Terminating formerly provided services - Routine vision care. Makes their internal numbers look better on reports; fewer long appointment windows. Vision care was one of the worst, scheduling-wise.
5. The bulk of Phoenix VA's problems are already nationally known. These are a few of the rest of them.
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SCPO David Lockwood
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Sounds like people are thinking about the patients and their saftey for once.
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