VA Outpatient Clinic in Lynchburg
By Cynthia T. Pegram
Things went smoothly at the
new Veterans Affairs Outpatient
Clinic in Lynchburg
when the doors opened,
as promised, early in September.
“Everybody that’s come in that’s needed
to be cared for has been seen,” said Gary
Stewart, clinic administrator. “Right
now it’s a total positive experience.”
Area veterans had long awaited
the opening of a Lynchburg clinic.
It expects to serve up to 6,300 veterans
in Central Virginia, which has
an estimated 14,000 veterans.
The clinic, at 1600 Lakeside Drive, has
nearly 10,000 square feet of space and
is designed as a primary-care facility.
It is easy to navigate, with an inner hallway
that makes it possible to traverse the
entire facility nonstop or step into offi ces
and exam rooms on either side of the hall.
The building also is newly furnished,
with Virginia-like landscape photographs
decorating the walls and cheerful,
comfortable chairs in the waiting area.
In the exam room, the exam tables are
designed to make it easy for people
with impaired breathing or physical
weakness to lie back or sit up.
The community-based outpatient clinics
are intended to provide basic medical
and mental health care, “not emergency
care, not surgery, not more complicated
things,” said Dr. Thomas Eldridge, who
directs the primary-care programs out
of the VA Medical Center in Salem.
Most veterans pay little or nothing
for routine care. If a patient opts to go
to a Lynchburg specialist, the VA will
collaborate with that doctor, but the
patient is responsible for the bill.
The Lynchburg medical community
has been welcoming, said Eldridge. “We
have no confl ict at all with them.”
“We only take care of veterans,” said Eldridge,
“so we’re certainly not competing
with the docs here for the non-veterans.”
The veterans now being seen at the
clinic are considered “eligible” – that
is, they already are enrolled in the VA
system and have been assigned to the
Lynchburg clinic and a provider. The
clinic is not open to all veterans, but
rather to those who are eligible.
However, those who are
eligible aren’t required to come to
the clinic, said Ann Benois, chief of
voluntary services out of Salem.
“It’s their option. If they decide to
stay with their primary care provider at
Salem they are welcome to do that, but
if it’s more convenient for them or if it
makes a lot more sense, access-wise, they
can request a transfer to come here.”
One of the advantages for the
people who get care at the VA,
she said, is the camaraderie.
“There are a lot of vets waiting
in the waiting room and veterans
working in the clinic,” she said.
That means they have a special relationship
with each other “which enables us to
enhance our ability to give medical care.”
With several schools of nursing
in the area plus a number of healthrelated
career tracks in local colleges,
it’s likely that someday the clinic will
have affi liations with some of them.
“We would love to collaborate,” said
Eldridge. “We don’t have anything now, but that’s something we’re
used to doing and we value as being
part of training programs for
health-care providers of the future.”
Benois also hopes to be able to
draw on volunteers to drive the
patient transport minivan roundtrip
to the VA in Salem. Although the job
is volunteer, she said, anyone who
drives must meet certain criteria.
For more information about
volunteering, e-mail Benois at
Shelby.Benois@va.gov.
Pegram is a staff writer for
The News & Advance in Lynchburg. |
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