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View Full Version : A look at hospital troubles across the country



spice756
2nd January 2009, 00:23
Hospitals around the country are struggling to stay afloat amid the recession, although many have had financial problems for years, often blamed on Medicare, Medicaid and other government health programs that don't fully cover the costs of care for millions of patients.

Some recent developments:

_In mid-December, the prestigious Cleveland Clinic started a hiring and salary freeze across the 33,000-worker health system; it also restricted travel and use of consultants and contractors.

_In New Jersey, five of the 79 acute care hospitals in business at the start of 2008 have closed, most recently Muhlenberg Regional Medical Center, and a sixth may close soon. In early December, the state health department said it would dole out $44 million to six others to keep them from closing or slashing services.

_Other recent hospital closures include the 617-bed Physicians Medical Center Carraway in Birmingham, Ala.; Century City Doctors Hospital in Los Angeles, and Lincoln Park Hospital, in an upscale Chicago neighborhood.


_The Healthcare Association of Hawaii in November reported hospitals there posted their eighth straight year of losses and said the situation will worsen. The two-hospital Hawaii Medical Center filed for bankruptcy, several hospitals have laid off large numbers of workers and the Hawaii Health Systems network of about a dozen public hospitals needed a $13 million advance in late August to avoid shutting down.

_Numerous hospitals have filed for bankruptcy, including Charlotte, N.C.-based Hospital Partners of America, which operates four hospitals; Michael Reese Medical Center in Chicago and Associated Healthcare Systems Inc., which has four rural hospitals in the South; and North Oakland Medical Centers in Pontiac, Mich.

_Many hospitals are laying off workers, trimming the hours of part-timers and reducing use of more-expensive temporary nurses hired through agencies. Among them are the four-hospital St. Vincent's Health System in Alabama; Boston Medical Center, which primarily serves immigrants and poor people, and the Columbia St. Mary's system, which has four hospitals in Milwaukee and Mequon, Wis.

_Nashville-based HCA Inc., the nation's No. 1 private hospital chain with about 160 hospitals, is cutting about 110 jobs and closing most functions — even the emergency department — at its Portland, Tenn., hospital, and laying off roughly 100 headquarters staffers.

_ For-profit Tenet Healthcare Corp., which operates 56 hospitals in 12 states, has seen patient volumes dip, missed Wall Street expectations in the third quarter and warned it may not make its financial targets next year. Its shares have been hammered, plunging from $6.55 in early September to $1.10 by Christmas.

_Some hospitals have been posting multimillion-dollar losses or had credit rating agencies put their bonds on credit watch or downgrade their ratings. Some investor-owned hospital companies have seen share prices plummet, missed Wall Street forecasts or lowered their own financial performance predictions. Along with trimming expenses and delaying capital projects, some are discussing mergers or selling medical office buildings to raise cash.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/12/27/america/Meltdown-Hospitals-List.php (http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/12/27/america/Meltdown-Hospitals-List.php)



Intresting article doing web search.


It seems the city or community GDP is not enough to keep the healthcare going.

Prisoner#69
2nd January 2009, 00:28
I have seen this first hand. Hospital's are laying off doctors/RNs for any reason to save money. Wait times in the ER are longer. Patient loads have drastically increased for doctors/RNs who haven't been laid off.

spice756
2nd January 2009, 00:46
The healthcare is bad all over the place the US ,Canada and UK so on..There is a shortage of hospitals and doctors/nurses.The wait times are bad.

I don't know why the cost of healthcare is higher than the GDP and why state run healthcare lacks money.

But communism may not fix the heathcare probem like social democratic cannot.The cost of heathcare is just too high unless we are all rich to put money into it.

lombas
4th January 2009, 10:58
Over here in Belgium, healthcare is pretty good (well, fantastic in many ways). Of course, commercialization lures as well, and the struggle to keep certain rights is inevitable.

Because, for neoliberals, good and free healthcare is just another commodity on which you can save.

politics student
4th January 2009, 13:33
The healthcare is bad all over the place the US ,Canada and UK so on..There is a shortage of hospitals and doctors/nurses.The wait times are bad.

I don't know why the cost of healthcare is higher than the GDP and why state run healthcare lacks money.

But communism may not fix the heathcare probem like social democratic cannot.The cost of heathcare is just too high unless we are all rich to put money into it.

Ummmm I know that Canada is not having the same problems and the UK its main issue is privatization. We do not have doctors being fired to save money.
However in the great wisdom of a Tory government we had private companies build hospitals then rent them. In the short run this was dirt cheap and built the hospitals needed, in the long run it’s fucking expensive.
There is a lot of material written about healthcare which is well worth reading up on. All countries have issues but the USA healthcare is by far the most expensive and worst of the lot.