Thursday, February 26, 2009
MLK
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Financial and.....
We definitely need to do something about the closing of Public Hospitals in a time when they are required most. Public hospitals serve the underserved and individuals who cannot afford healthcare. If these were to close down, where would these individuals go?
Especially in the current times of economic reccession more people are losing their jobs and the pool of uninsured is increasing. These individuals then depend on the Public hospitals to take care of their health care needs. There has been an increased burden on these hospitals to provide care. This overstretches the system and has pushed many of these hospitals into bankruptcy. The very fact that these hospitals are overworked is a witness to the fact that they are required. And the solution to that is not closing them down for financial reasons but rather the state stepping in to finance them. This will not only take care of the underserved , many of whom come for acute problems rather than chronic but also keep our uninsured with no health care pool from rising.
I definitely agree with Harut that there is absolutely no time to spare and that this issue cannot take a backseat, especially with the current economic crisis that we are faced with in America. Even fewer families are able to afford healthcare now than before the collapse of the economy. I'm glad that we have a president who now sees this and has made healthcare reform a priority. There are a lot of things that President Obama said last night in his State of the Nation and I got the following from a CNN article and thought it was really interesting:
"Obama's prescription for health-care reform included making "the largest investment ever" in preventive care, rooting out Medicare fraud and investing in electronic health records and new technology in an effort to reduce errors, bring down costs, ensure privacy and save lives."
I think it is interesting that he puts preventive care so high on his to-do list, as this is a topic that we debated heavily just a few weeks ago. The link for the rest of the CNN article is:
http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/02/24/obama.health.care/index.html
Another Reason For Healthcare Reform...
Public and Private Hospital Partnership
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Are we sure it's money?
I was raised in Watts and born in ther MLK Hospital. I still don't understand why it was closed. It served the largest number of "underserved" individuals. Is it really a money issue or are there more social politics around inequalities and racial/class disparities revolving around it? ... I have yet to understand this issue....
No Public Hospitals = Unhealthy America
keeping hospitals open...
fewer public hospitals = less healthy population
Public hospital closures indicate a failing system
Public Hospitals on Decline
Public hospitals do our country a great service in taking all patients, regardless of insurance or income level. That is a huge part of why ERs are overflowing-because those patients who can't pay are automatically pushed into these waiting rooms. What many people fail to acknowledge, however, is that eventually these patients are seen and given care. That cannot be said for private hospitals. It may not be common yet private hospital ERs do turn patients away due to insurance purposes.
I have personally experienced the problems of the private hospital system. Working as an EMT in a city, there has been more than one occasion that we were in route to a private hospital with a patient and had to turn all the way around, across town and out of the way to the public just because the patient couldn't afford care. That is absurd. I understand and agree that when you are making an appointment to see a doctor or specialist, they need to be covered by your insurance. But how can anyone turn away a person in an emergency situation all because of costs?? Maybe this is something that needs to be changed among all Emergency Rooms in both public and private hospitals. Would clinicians and hospital administrators rather have deaths than care for those who simply have the wrong insurance???
Public Hospitals on the Decline
Negligence
We Need Public Hospitals More than Ever in this Economy
county hospital
Public Hospitals on the Decline
The Dregs of the Patient Pool
Depressing...
I agree with "Sindy", we need tot ake action for this failing health care system, and health care professions should be the activists for it. It might be one of the ways to save our economy, country.
Increasing disparities
What causes the decline?
Public Hospitals on the Decline
With little or no income, some public hospitals may cut the number of attending physicians like K-Mart would cut the number of employees when it’s unable to generate adequate funds. The critical difference is that with fewer K-Mart employees, grandma Jenkins may not get greeted near K-Mart’s entrance, but with fewer health care professionals in a public hospital, little Timmy may not get that bone marrow transplant soon enough. Although this may be a far-fetched and rather radical example, the point is that public hospitals are often times unable to provide quality care to the deserving poor and uninsured population- often due to business-related issues.
Clearly, this is a problem. More than two hundred years ago, this nation was founded upon the principle of equality for all. But clearly there is a huge discrepancy between private and public hospitals. With more public hospitals shutting their doors, more poor and uninsured individuals are falling through the cracks and are being neglected the quality health care that they direly need and deserve. This inadequacy is fundamentally plaguing our health care system as the well-resourced private hospital goers are receiving quality health care and the public hospital visitors are forced to bare the brunt of our double-standard health care system.
With little or no income, some public hospitals may cut the number of attending physicians like K-Mart would cut the number of employees when it’s unable to generate adequate funds. The critical difference is that with fewer K-Mart employees, grandma Jenkins may not get greeted near K-Mart’s entrance, but with fewer health care professionals in a public hospital, little Timmy may not get that bone marrow transplant soon enough. Although this may be a far-fetched and rather radical example, the point is that public hospitals are often times unable to provide quality care to the deserving poor and uninsured population- often due to business-related issues.
Private clinics may be the future
They definitely that they do not take closing hospitals lightly.
The problem: With the closures of county clinics and hospitals, like MLK in 2007, the county of Los Angeles DHS was trying to secure its most critical elements of its health care, like their "trauma, hospital and specialty care services," according the the LA county officials, according to an LA Times article. Furthermore, they showed commitment to close the health care gap for the poor and the rest of the population by wanting to supplement existing private clinics to care for indigent population. They better. They should prevent the feelings that lead up to civil explosions like the Watts Riots. MLK was built as LA County’s reaction to these Riots.
Part of the solution: The idea of having health care satellites like these private health care clinics sounds pleasant enough. Closer, more personal health care sounds as nice as going to the neighborhood pharmacy. On top of that, the county is saving money by substituting these for its own, more costly, county clinics, which are currently closing in the tens per year. (In case anyone is worried about areas that do not have private clinics, the LA Times article mentioned William T. Fujioka, the county’s chief executive, who said that the county clinics would not close in areas that already do not have private clinics, like the Antelope Valley). I do not see private clinics as a complete solution, however.
Some questions still exist: How will a private clinic, which is not required to accept indigent patients, will accept the uninsured patients which have been displaced by hospital closures? Even though the county will contract with these clinics, will they be able to accommodate for all the displaced patients?
Vision for the future: There is an article that mentions retail clinics inside neighborhood retail stores like Walmart, CVS pharmacy and Walgreen's. They offer preventative services for now but in the future, I can see them offering more comprehensive types of health services.
http://articles.latimes.com/2008/feb/14/local/me-clinics14
http://www.aishealth.com/Bnow/hbd020509.html
Monday, February 23, 2009
Lose-Lose Situation for the Uninsured
Although the fact that we live in a capitalistic society that emphasizes competition and a free market economy can have positive effects on our economy in the long run, it seems to be having the opposite effect on our health care system. Instead of treating health care as a right, it is being treated as a commodity to be bought and sold. While this does not affect to a large degree those who are fortunate enough to be insured, it is having detrimental effects on the quality of life of the uninsured, a population which, in this economy is growing by the day.
Let's be honest: Hospitals are big business
Level the hospital playing field
PUBLIC HOSPITALS ON THE DECLINE
Where do all the patients go?
Saturday, February 21, 2009
No hospital, no ER.
The first thing that came to my mind at the mention of the closing of hospitals was the fact that a large number of people rely on hospitals as their primary form of healthcare, as emergency rooms are required by law to treat anyone who comes in. The absence of emergency rooms could leave many people without proper medical care, and also has the effect of increasing the burden upon remaining hospitals, as they would be forced to serve larger numbers of people without increasing their number of beds/capacity for patients. This dynamic is disadvantageous for hospitals as well as patients; hospitals seldom provide the best care they can when they are over-crowded, and patients face longer waiting times and sub-par service when they are sharing an Emergency Room that is over capacity. There is, however, a chicken and egg question here: are hospitals closing because of a failing healthcare system, or is the failing healthcare system forcing hospitals to close? It may be a difficult question, but it seems unlikely that closing one hospital after another will benefit the general population in any significant way.
Friday, February 20, 2009
The Effect of Hospital Ownership Conversions
From September 1997 through January 2003, researchers at Brandeis University, Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Cambridge, Mass., studied how a change in ownership from nonprofit to for-profit status ("conversion") affected hospitals' provision of community benefits, financial performance and relationships with other health care providers.
The project included a nationwide study of all 709 hospital conversions between 1990 and 2001 as well as in-depth case studies of eight hospitals.
The result was published by The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) in Oct 3, 2005.
Key Findings
• Uncompensated care levels dropped when a nonprofit hospital converted to for-profit ownership.
• The most significant decreases in uncompensated care occurred when not-for-profit hospitals converted to for-profit chain-owned facilities.
• Conversion affected the hospital's collaborative and competitive behavior toward other providers and organizations in the community.
• Conversion hospitals, may exceeded the nonprofit counterparts in terms of financial contribution, but they did not substitute for the hospital's role as a community partner.
I also think the impact of decreasing public hospitals due to conversion to private ones will reduce the levels of community benefit activities, since these are generally thought to be unprofitable and therefore incompatible with for-profit hospitals’ presumptive goal of profit maximization.
The community will come up short—uninsured and low-income people receive less care, all patients have reduced access to specialized emergency services, and society-at-large foregoes the benefits of medical education and research.
No end in sight
"At follow-up, the percentage of patients from Shasta County who reported no regular provider increased from 14.0 to 27.7 and the percentage who reported they were denied care rose from 10.8 to 16.9. Meanwhile, patients in San Luis Obispo County reported improved access to a regular provider and the level of denied care was unchanged. Patients in Shasta County had significant declines on the Medical Outcomes Study Short Form in health perception, social and role function, and increases in pain as compared with those patients in San Luis Obispo County."
Now, this is an outdated study, but it basically shows how taking away access to healthcare providers and services impacts a population. Even when these resources are not completely eliminated but simply downsized, this forces the public hospitals to go into "battlefield mode," triaging their patients so that the ones with the most severe, life-threatening injuries are treated right away while those with less pressing (but nonetheless still important) problems are constantly relegated to the waiting area, sometimes for months at a time.
This whole subject is a weighty issue with no clear-cut solution. There are some nonprofit hospital systems out there with huge administrative pay-offs, notably BJC HealthCare, whose CEO's salary is upwards of $1.8 million a year. I think he could stand to receive a severely-reduced paycheck. Or, maybe if private hospitals operated one day out of the week on a non-profit basis, this could help alleviate some of the financial burden that public hospitals are facing. I doubt private hospitals are willing to do this, or if most of them are in the appropriate geographic areas to even reach the low SES communities, but it's just an idea.