6 Aug 8th-Aug 14th, 2024 phoenixnewtimes.com PHOENIX NEW TIMES | NEWS | FEATURE | FOOD & DRINK | ARTS & CULTURE | MUSIC | CONCERTS | CANNABIS | Dying at the Door Phoenix VA did nothing as veteran had fatal heart attack in its parking lot. BY ZACH BUCHANAN I n the spring of 2023, a military veteran suffered a fatal cardiac episode in a car parked just outside the entrance of the Carl T. Hayden Veterans Administration Medical Center in Phoenix. Instead of providing basic life support, the hospital passed the buck to the Phoenix Fire Department, which didn’t arrive for 11 minutes. The fire department transported the veteran to a different hospital, where they died two days later. That’s according to a report released July 24 by the Office of the Inspector General that found multiple failures related to the death. The OIG found that the hospital failed to take the veteran’s vital signs at an appointment earlier in the day, failed to provide basic life support when the patient became unresponsive on the hospital’s doorstep and then failed to conduct a proper investigation into the death. The report stated that the veteran was in their 70s but provided no other identi- fying information, nor did it specify the date the event occurred. A spokesperson for the OIG said it “cannot provide the date due to patient privacy.” While the report revealed alarming lapses, it noted that the OIG was “unable to determine whether a change in care would have resulted in a different outcome for the patient.” However, in a statement released July 24, Marine veteran and U.S. Rep. Ruben Gallego criticized the hospital — which is in his district — for what he called “inex- cusable failures that led to the death of a veteran.” “As a veteran who has received care through the VA, it is disgraceful that more effort seems to have been put into covering for those responsible than saving a veteran’s life,” the statement continued. Gallego also sent a letter to the Under Secretary of Health who oversees the Veterans Health Administration, requesting a briefing and demanding answers to a list of questions. Phoenix New Times requested comment from the Phoenix VA Healthcare System, which includes the hospital, but has not received a response. The Phoenix branch of the VA — and the VA in general — has been the subject of consistent scrutiny and scandal in recent years. In 2014, it was revealed that Phoenix VA administrators kept secret waitlists to avoid disclosing to the federal government that many veterans had to wait months — an average of 115 days to see a primary care provider — before receiving care. Reporting the actual wait times would have imperiled financial bonuses VA hospitals receive for keeping wait times short. CNN reported that at least 40 veterans died while on the waitlist. A decade later, ABC 15 reported, many Arizona veterans are still waiting more than 20 days for medical care. ‘We don’t do that’ On that fateful spring day, the veteran arrived at the hospital’s Ambulatory Care Clinic for a urology appointment. The appointment was routine, and afterward a family member picked up the veteran for a ride home. While still on hospital grounds, the OIG report said, the veteran became unrespon- sive, prompting the family member to turn around and park directly in front of the clinic’s entrance. The family rushed inside, asking a hospitality employee at the infor- mation desk for help. That employee called the hospital’s rapid response team. According to the OIG report, the rapid response team operator replied, “We don’t do that,” and instructed the employee to call 911 and the VA police. A 911 call was placed, but it took 11 minutes for Phoenix Fire Department personnel to respond and provide emergency care. During that time, the unresponsive patient was not breathing. “For every minute a normal heartbeat is not restored during a cardiac arrest,” the OIG report noted, “the chance of survival decreases by 7 to 10 percent.” The OIG report chronicled multiple failures before, during and after the veter- an’s cardiac event. The veteran had a history of cardiac issues while under the VA’s care, yet no one checked their vital signs during the urology appointment earlier in the day. “Not assessing vital signs at the appointment may have contributed to a missed opportunity for early identification of the patient’s clinical decline,” the OIG report said. In the days and weeks afterward, the report added, the hospital repeatedly failed to conduct a proper investigation of the death. “Facility leaders were informed of the patient’s medical emergency on two occasions within 10 days of the event,” the report said, “but took no further actions.” It took two months for the hospital to file a report in the VA’s Joint Patient Safety Reporting System, and even then, the investigators assigned to the case by the hospital lacked medical expertise. But the most egregious failures occurred during the 11 minutes the veteran sat dying in a car outside the hospital entrance. ‘Three feet from the door’ In surveillance video photos included in the OIG report, the car belonging The Carl T. Hayden Veterans Administration Medical Center in Phoenix has been the subject of scrutiny for years after a 2014 scandal. (Photo by Zach Buchanan) | NEWS | >> p 8