Is deficient medical care a harmless error? According to the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), it is.
A new report by a federal watchdog group says the VA regularly excuses deficient medical care as examples of “harmless” errors rather than systemic problems.
The Office of Special Council (OSC) submitted a letter to President Obama and Congress on Monday that included nine examples of substandard practices, including improper scheduling, falsifying patient records, and unsanitary work practices. In one case, two patients at a VA mental health facility waited years before receiving appropriate care.
In the letter, U.S. special counsel Carolyn Lerner said that OSC has received more than 50 complaints from whistleblowers about substandard care, and that her office has already referred 29 cases to the VA for further investigation.
But the OSC letter shows concern over the VA’s ability and willingness to admit systemic problems exist. “The VA, and particularly the VA’s Office of the Medical Inspector (OMI), has consistently used a “harmless error” defense,” the letter said, “where the Department acknowledges problems but claims patient care is unaffected.”









