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The VA Has Reduced Wait Times For Medical Equipment, But Many Veterans Still Wait Weeks

Navy veteran Whitney Hardin, 24, enters her home with help from her mother, Joy.
Carson Frame
/
American Homefront
Navy veteran Whitney Hardin, 24, enters her home with help from her mother, Joy.

The VA says 8500 requests for wheelchairs, artificial limbs, and other equipment have waited more than 30 days. That's down from 64,000 requests last year.

For veterans who need things like wheelchairs, walkers, and artificial limbs, getting them from the Department of Veterans Affairs can be a difficult, lengthy process. According to the agency's own numbers, thousands have waited longer than a month - sometimes substanially longer - for their requests to be fulfilled.

A VA spokesperson said the agency's goal is to review and fulfill requests as soon as possible, ideally within 30 days. The department now processes them within five days on average nationwide.

But the VA reports that about 8,500 equipment requests across its system have waited longer than 30 days. More than 2,500 have been pending for two months or more. The VA says it's improved its processes and cut down on delays. But some patients, like 24 year-old Navy veteran Whitney Hardin, still await medical devices and equipment.

Last year, Hardin was diagnosed with Rasmussen's encephalitis, a rare neurological disorder that inflames her brain and causes near-constant seizures. Doctors later concluded that the condition was related to injections she got when she joined the Navy in 2011.

Hardin recently underwent her third brain surgery to relieve the symptoms. While it helped manage the seizures, it limited her mobility. She now relies on a host of assistive technologies, including a wheelchair, ramps, shower modifications, a leg brace, and a specialized walker.

"The walker is a huge part of my rehab," Hardin said. "It helps me start to be able to get more mobilization on my own around the house and out and about - anywhere that I can - outside of therapy."

Getting the walker wasn't easy. Hardin's doctor ordered it from the VA in April, right after she began outpatient rehabilitation. But the VA had trouble getting one of the parts and couldn't immediately fill the order.

"All they said was we have it on order for you," Hardin said.

As of mid-October, the VA still had not come through with the equipment. Hardin ended up getting the same walker from Project Mend, a San Antonio-based nonprofit group that refurbishes medical equipment and offers it to people at a cost savings. In 2017, it served nearly 400 veterans and expects to serve more than 500 this year. Fulfilling Hardin's walker order took just a few days.

According to Project Mend CEO Cathy Valdez, veteran clients sometimes face delays at the VA.

Whitney  Hardin uses a specialized walker to improve her mobility. It has a fixture to support her left hand and arm, which are partially paralyzed.
Credit Carson Frame / American Homefront
/
American Homefront
Whitney Hardin uses a specialized walker to improve her mobility. It has a fixture to support her left hand and arm, which are partially paralyzed.

"When the veteran comes to us, oftentimes the story that we hear is that the veteran might be eligible to receive, for example, a scooter or a wheelchair from the VA," she said. "But they're going to have to wait to be able to get that - maybe a month. Two. Three. And they need that right away."

The Process Behind Prosthetics

Fred Downs, a prosthetics consultant with Paralyzed Veterans of America, said delays in fulfilling about 8,500 medical equipment requests is cause for concern.

"I'm not comfortable with that number," he said. "I need to know more facts. What's it composed of? What type of orders?"

Downs was the national director of the VA's prosthetic and sensory aids service for 30 years and has also worked with the department's procurement and logistics arm. He said there are legitimate reasons why some cases drag on. Equipment might require special fabrication, multiple fittings, or coordination with outside vendors.

But while delays in complex cases may be understandable, Downs says other cases are slowed down only by bureaucratic obstacles. He said he isn't sure how many of the 8,500 VA delays fall into each category.

As it turns out, VA isn't either.

Downs said the department is still analyzing the data.

"The thing that we all worry about are those cases where a veteran needs a wheelchair. It's prescribed. And so the veteran goes home and doesn't hear anything from the VA," he said. "Well, what happened to it?"

"Somebody's dropped the ball big time," Downs said.

A History of Delays

Last year the VA Inspector general found a host of problems with the way some medical centers were handling prosthetics cases. Understaffing, lack of accountability, and issues with logistics and warehousing often played a role.

VA Secretary Robert Wilkie said that this year's numbers actually represent a marked improvement.

"Across the country, last year, 64,000 prosthetic requests were 30 days old or older. We've now gotten that down to 8,500," he said.

The department has changed some of its processes, making it easier to track equipment requests and hold medical center directors more accountable for fulfilling them. The agency is trying to determine how many delayed requests are acceptable.

Wilkie said he's proud of the VA's progress so far.

"That is certainly a case where we have moved out, and it shows America that the department does have the potential for agility and adaptability," he said.

Back in Texas, veteran Whitney Hardin continues to adapt as well. She's made strides with her rehab and mastered the track at her physical therapy center.

"I'm doing 336 feet twice," she said. "Two laps on the walker."

Hardin believes there's a chance her VA walker will still come in. If it does, she plans to donate the one she's using now to Project Mend so that it might help someone else.

This story was produced by the American Homefront Project, a public media collaboration that reports on American military life and veterans. Funding comes from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

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