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Department of Veterans Affairs Provider Accountability Act

11/1/2022, 2:47 PM

Congressional Summary of S 221

Department of Veterans Affairs Provider Accountability Act

The bill requires the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to transmit specified information to the National Practitioner Data Bank and the applicable state licensing board when the VA brings a covered major adverse action against certain appointed VA medical employees. A covered major adverse action is an action originating from circumstances in which the behavior of the employee so substantially failed to meet clinical practice standards that it raised reasonable concern for the safety of patients.

The bill requires the VA to transmit the employee's name and the description of and reason for the covered major adverse action. The VA must also update its credentialing system with a record of covered major adverse actions taken and an indication that information was transmitted as required.

The VA shall enroll certain appointed VA medical employees into a continuous query of their record within the National Practitioner Data Bank and shall implement a mechanism for maintaining and updating the information collected through such query to facilitate the sharing of information between Veterans Integrated Service Networks.

The VA may not enter into a settlement agreement relating to an adverse action by certain appointed VA medical employees under which it would be required to conceal a serious medical error or lapse in generally accepted standards of clinical practice. Such provision shall not apply to a negative record if the VA Office of Accountability and Whistleblower Protection and the Office of Special Counsel jointly certify that the negative record is not legitimate.

The bill requires the VA to provide mandatory training to all health staff who handle hiring, privileging, and credentialing, regarding all policies of the VA on credentialing, privileging, and when and how to report adverse actions to the relevant entities.

Current Status of Bill S 221

Bill S 221 is currently in the status of Bill Introduced since January 24, 2019. Bill S 221 was introduced during Congress 116 and was introduced to the Senate on January 24, 2019.  Bill S 221's most recent activity was Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. as of January 14, 2020

Bipartisan Support of Bill S 221

Total Number of Sponsors
1
Democrat Sponsors
0
Republican Sponsors
1
Unaffiliated Sponsors
0
Total Number of Cosponsors
5
Democrat Cosponsors
1
Republican Cosponsors
4
Unaffiliated Cosponsors
0

Policy Area and Potential Impact of Bill S 221

Primary Policy Focus

Armed Forces and National Security

Potential Impact Areas

- Department of Veterans Affairs
- Employee performance
- Government employee pay, benefits, personnel management
- Government information and archives
- Health care quality
- Health information and medical records
- Health personnel
- Licensing and registrations
- Medical ethics
- Personnel records
- Veterans' medical care

Alternate Title(s) of Bill S 221

Department of Veterans Affairs Provider Accountability Act
Department of Veterans Affairs Provider Accountability Act
Department of Veterans Affairs Provider Accountability Act
Department of Veterans Affairs Provider Accountability Act
A bill to amend title 38, United States Code, to require the Under Secretary of Health to report major adverse personnel actions involving certain health care employees to the National Practitioner Data Bank and to applicable State licensing boards, and for other purposes.

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