Trump’s VA pick pledges to save beleaguered agency
WASHINGTON — Physician David Shulkin headed toward likely confirmation as President Donald Trump’s veterans affairs secretary, after offering repeated assurances Wednesday to sometimes skeptical senators that he will work quickly to meet the medical care needs of millions of veterans without dismantling the beleaguered department.
At his confirmation hearing, Shulkin, the top health official at the Department of Veterans Affairs since 2015, cited efforts during his tenure to improve wait times for veterans needing urgent care, such as same-day services in primary care and mental health at VA medical centres. He urged a more integrated VA network in which veterans could seek outside care, but only in close co-ordination with the VA.
“VA is a unique national resource that is worth saving, and I am committed to doing just that,” Shulkin said. “There will be far greater accountability, dramatically improved access, responsiveness and expanded care options.”
Pressed repeatedly as to whether he may be pressured by Trump to privatize the agency, he told the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee that he believed that VA hospitals offered unique services in treating battlefield injury.


