Rounds Delivers Opening Statement on his IHS Assessment Bill

November 8, 207

WASHINGTON—U.S. Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) today spoke in support of his legislation, S. 465, the Independent Outside Audit of the Indian Health Service Act of 2017, during a Senate Committee on Indian Affairs hearing. Since taking office in 2015, Rounds and his staff have analyzed the IHS and its shortcomings, concluding there are three primary areas of concern: there is no funding allocation strategy for the 12 IHS regions, there is no standard of quality measurement and there is high turnover of staff resulting in low accountability amongst management. Rounds’ assessment legislation is the first step toward setting us on a path to address the agency’s longstanding failures.

“For years, tribal members in my home state of South Dakota have dealt with unimaginable horrors in dealing with IHS facilities,” said Rounds in his opening remarks. “Tribal members are suffering and even dying due to inadequate and disgraceful care. IHS will only continue to fail unless we take a close look into the operations, funding, quality of care, and management at IHS. I believe that a comprehensive assessment of IHS is a necessary first step toward making calculated and systematic changes at IHS.”

 Rounds’ remarks as prepared for delivery:

Good afternoon, I first want to start off by thanking Chairman Hoeven, Vice-Chairman Udall and the members of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs for their dedicated service to the Native American communities.

Today, I am introducing my bill to provide for a comprehensive assessment of the Indian Health Service, S.465.

As you know, the IHS is the agency responsible for providing health care for American Indians and Alaska Natives as required by federal treaty agreement.

For years, tribal members in my home state of South Dakota have dealt with unimaginable horrors in dealing with IHS facilities.

Upon taking office in 2015, my staff and I have spent significant time trying to learn more about these problems.

In our research, we found four primary areas of concern: there is no funding allocation strategy for the 12 IHS regions, there is no standard of quality measurement, there is high turnover of staff resulting in low accountability amongst management and there is no consultation with tribes.

The IHS serves approximately 2.2 million Native Americans, who are members of 567 federally recognized tribes.

For fiscal year 2017, IHS was appropriated just under $5 billion dollars in discretionary funding and $147 million dollars in mandatory funding from the Special Diabetes Program.

This does not include third-party collections of approximately $1.1 billion dollars.

Despite a large user population and an annual appropriation of $5 billion, IHS does NOT have a funding formula.

Regional allocations are not based upon the number of people who received healthcare through IHS, regional user population growth or types of services offered.

While many believe that IHS is underfunded, from my standpoint, investing more taxpayer money into a dysfunctional system will only compound the problem. IHS lacks an efficient system and accountability; this needs to be addressed before we consider funding. Then, I agree it will be time to talk about adequate funding.

Furthermore, there are no consistent qualitative measurements. The most recent qualitative measurements are from 2008 – nearly a decade old – so it’s unclear if IHS management has a sense of which regions are successful or failing.

IHS divides itself into 12 service areas in the United States. IHS’s Great Plains Area, which serves South Dakota tribal members, has the worst health care disparities of all IHS regions, including:

  • Lowest life expectancy,
  • Highest diabetes death rate, 5 times the U.S. average,
  • Highest TB death rate, and
  • Highest overall age adjusted death rate.

To give you an idea of some of the things we are seeing and hearing in our area:

  • The Wall Street Journal reported in June 2017, “At the Indian Health Service hospital in Pine Ridge, South Dakota, a 57-year-old man was sent home with a bronchitis diagnosis—only to die five hours later of heart failure.”
  • When a patient at the federal agency’s Winnebago, Nebraska, facility stopped breathing, nurses responding to the “code blue” found the emergency supply cart was empty, and the man died.
  • In Sisseton, South Dakota, a high school prom queen was coughing up blood. An IHS doctor gave her cough syrup and antianxiety medication; within days she died of a blood clot in her lung.
  • And just this August, IHS officials announced that patients who have recently received care at the podiatry clinic in the Winnebago IHS Hospital may have been exposed to HIV and hepatitis.

Because there are not standard of quality expectations and a methodology to measure quality; these facilities are failing very basic quality performances that our people deserve. In fact, the quality problems have become so pervasive, that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS, accreditation of several IHS facilities are in jeopardy.

Throughout the past year-and-a-half, the Rosebud and Pine Ridge Hospitals in the Great Plains Region have been operating under a Systems Improvement Agreement with CMS trying to regain their accreditation status.

Thankfully, the Systems Improvement Agreement at Rosebud was completed on September 1st of this year.

However, our office was made aware of multiple timeline extensions in Pine Ridge because these IHS direct-care facilities continued to fail CMS surveys.

Just last Friday, the Pine Ridge IHS Hospital was deemed not in compliance with CMS’s conditions of participation for emergency services. By issuing a final notification for the Pine Ridge IHS Hospital, the facility is in immediate jeopardy status and hospital’s provider agreement will be terminated at the end of next week.

Termination means that IHS can no longer bill Medicare for services, impacting Medicaid funding as well. Further, future third-party revenue available to IHS to fund services, maintenance projects and other necessary costs will likely be reduced.

Finally, there is high turnover throughout the entire IHS organization.

For example, within my home state’s Great Plains Region, we’ve had 5 different area directors in the last 21 months. That’s an average tenure in this important management position of roughly 4 months. And as you may know, nationally there has not been a permanent director leading IHS since February of 2015.

Tribal members are suffering and even dying due to inadequate and disgraceful care.

IHS will only continue to fail unless we take a close look into the operations, funding, quality of care, and management at IHS. I believe that a comprehensive assessment of IHS is a necessary first step toward making calculated and systematic changes at IHS.

S. 465 would accomplish this goal and set us on a path to address the long standing failures of IHS.

My legislation would require the Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services to conduct an assessment of IHS’s health care delivery systems and financial management processes only at direct-care facilities. Let me be clear, this assessment is not proposed for tribes with 638 Agreements in place; only direct IHS facilities.

This assessment I am proposing is a proven model for identifying potential reforms. We all remember the problems in 2014 in Veterans Administration health care. To address this issue Congress passed legislation calling for the Secretary of the VA to conduct an overall and systematic assessment of VA healthcare.

The integrated report was completed within the mandated timeframe of less than a year, and was officially submitted to the Secretary of the VA in September 2015. The assessment provided feedback and recommended changes that could lead to improvement in health outcomes.

The same should be done for the Indian Health Service.

Thank you.

Indian Affairs Committee Approves Bill to Protect Tribal Veterans’ Health Care

 

Photo: IHS

March 29, 2017

WASHINGTON — U.S. Sens. John Thune (R-S.D.) and Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), a member of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, applauded the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs for passing the Tribal Veterans Health Care Enhancement Act (S. 304), legislation they reintroduced in February that would improve tribal veterans’ access to health care. The committee approved the bill, which now heads to the full Senate for its consideration, by voice vote.

The bill, which was first introduced in the 114th Congress, would allow the Indian Health Service (IHS) to cover copay costs for tribal veterans who are referred by IHS to the Veterans Health Administration (VA) for services that are unavailable at IHS facilities. These referrals often require a copay that is currently the responsibility of the veteran. The bill would also require the IHS and VA, in consultation with Indian tribes, to outline an implementation plan through a memorandum of understanding.

“It’s unfortunate that tribal veterans, who fought bravely for our country, are too frequently caught between the bureaucracies of the IHS and VA,” said Thune. “The Tribal Veterans Health Care Enhancement Act is a common-sense fix that would require these agencies to work more effectively so they can deliver the quality care tribal veterans deserve. Our bill has strong bipartisan support, as evidenced by today’s vote in the Indian Affairs Committee, and I hope my colleagues in the Senate are able to consider it as soon as possible.”

“Tribal veterans shouldn’t have to worry about additional costs when they seek health care services,” said Rounds. “The priority is that they receive quality care in a timely manner. Our legislation will help streamline health care for all Native American veterans to make certain they receive the care they’ve been promised. I’m pleased to see our commonsense legislation taking this important step forward today.”

The Tribal Veterans Health Care Enhancement Act would:

·         Allow for IHS to pay for veterans’ copayments for services rendered at a VA facility, pursuant to an IHS referral;

·         Require IHS and VA to enter into a memorandum of understanding to provide for such payment; and

·         Require a report within 90 days of enactment with respect to:

o   The number, by state, of eligible Native American veterans utilizing VA medical facilities;

o   The number of referrals, by state, received annually from IHS to the VA from 2011 to 2016; and

o   Update on efforts at IHS and VA to streamline care for eligible Native American veterans who receive care at both IHS and VA, including changes required under the Indian Health Care Improvement Act and any barriers to achieve efficiencies.

Rounds Request Audit of Indian Health Services Before any More Money is Allocated

By Herb Ryan

U.S. Sen. Mike Rounds answered questions from a group of 35 South Dakota mayor’s, police and public officials at a luncheon at the South Dakota Air and Space Museum in Box Elder Thursday July 28, 2016. The main topic was appropriation of funds and the process that leads up to that decision. Rounds said he has always been willing to work across the aisle on new bills,but if there is not a sixty vote majority for a new bill, then it does not get on the calendar for discussion, the bill is dead in the water.

A discussion on the B-1 Bomber and it’s mission was given by Col. Gentry Boswell 28 Bomb Wing Commander at Ellsworth AFB followed by a base tour.

At a new conference following the meeting Rounds discussed the Indian Health Service issue calling it “inadequate and disgraceful” and had sent a letter dated July 6, 2016 to Honorable Daniel R Levinson, U.S Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Inspector General requesting an audit of Indian Health Services. See letter below.

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U.S. Senator Mike Rounds makes a point about inadequate care in the Indian Health Services program at the South Dakota Air And Space Museum in Box Elder Thursday morning July, 28 2016. Photo:Herb Ryan/Custer Free Press

 

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(L-R) Larry Larson, Mayor of Box Elder, the mayor’s wife Sandy Larson and Col. Gentry Boswell 28 Bomb Wing Commander at Ellsworth Air Force Base listen as U.S. Sen. Mike Rounds explains the complexities of government program funding. Photo:Herb Ryan/Custer Free Press

 

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Colonel Gentry Boswell 28 Bomb Wing Commander at Ellsworth Air Force Base explains the payload capabilities of the B-1 bomber Thursday July 28, 2016.Photo: Herb Ryan/Custer Free Press

 

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One of thirty outdoor exhibits at the South Dakota Air and Space Museum in Box Elder, SD. Photo:Herb Ryan/Custer Free Press.

South Dakota Air and Space Museum

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