'Not a functioning system': Hearing examines pharmacy problems in VA computer system tested in Spokane

May 9—WASHINGTON — House lawmakers grilled Department of Veterans Affairs officials and Oracle executives during a hearing Tuesday regarding problems with the pharmacy features of a computer system that has been tested in Spokane and across the Inland Northwest.

The department announced in April that it would indefinitely halt deployments of the troubled electronic health record system — which has caused numerous problems since it launched at Spokane's Mann-Grandstaff VA Medical Center in October 2020 — while dedicating more resources to mitigate the system's impact at sites where it is in use. The VA signed a $10 billion contract in 2018 with Cerner, which was acquired by Oracle last June and is now known as Oracle Cerner, to replace the department's existing system used by clinicians to track patient data and coordinate care.

Many of the Oracle Cerner system's problems have involved the parts of the system used to prescribe and dispense medications, which contributed to the death of a veteran in Ohio, VA officials confirmed Tuesday.

"We expect the VA pharmacists to give our veterans world-class service, and we owe them fully functional technology to do that," said Rep. Matt Rosendale of Montana, the Republican chairman of the House VA Subcommittee on Technology Modernization.

In an effort to shed light on those specific problems, the panel sent questionnaires to pharmacists at the five hospitals where the system has been deployed: Spokane; Walla Walla; Roseburg and White City, Oregon; and Columbus, Ohio.

Rep. Keith Self, R-Texas, read part of a statement one pharmacist at Mann-Grandstaff sent in response to the questionnaire. Because of "increased risks due to delays, inefficiencies, vulnerabilities, manual workarounds and the lack of responsiveness from Cerner to identify patient risks," the pharmacist said, "pharmacy staff must remain in a constant state of hyper-vigilance to recognize and intervene on those risks."

James Ellzy, a former Pentagon official who joined Oracle as a vice president in January after working on the system's rollout in Defense Department facilities, said it would take more time for VA employees to learn the new system.

"Whenever you change systems, you're going to not be as comfortable as the system you've been working in for decades," Ellzy said. "It's going to take time to learn the new system, and two years is not enough time to get comfortable in the pharmacy sphere with the new system."

In a September survey, only 6% of VA employees using the Oracle Cerner system said it enabled them to deliver high-quality care.