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Los Angeles County, CA | June 3, 2008 Election |
Los Angeles County Hospitals Closings Can Be PreventedBy Delaney "Doc" Smith, Jr.Candidate for Supervisor; County of Los Angeles; District 2 | |
This information is provided by the candidate |
Several hospitals in Los Angeles County have closed and many others are on the brink of closure largely due to financial reasons.Several area hospitals have closed in recent years, a few of which include West Side Hospital; Daniel Freeman Hospital; Martin Luther King Hospital; and Los Angeles County Rancho Los Amigos Hospital has been threatened with possible closure. Several private hospital are on the brink of closure due to financial reasons that stem from poor reimbursement from state Medi-Cal and private insurance companies. Federal EMTALA laws require that all patients presenting to a hospital emergency room must be evaluated and treatment rendered if required, however reimbursement from the state of California and insurance companies, especially HMOs are oftentimes poor, and in many cases bills are never paid.
While it has not been widely publicized, MKL hospital in recent years has been ranked in the top 10% of all hospitals in the nation for the treatment [save rate] in cases involving severe traumatic injuries. Many of the surgeons of the US military trained at MLK, and while problems with ancillary staff existed, it would appear that this was overstated, and the financial problems of the hospital understated in the local newpaper releases.
The hospital would not have closed if the earlier recom-mendations of Dr. Smith had been adopted. Statistically, on any given day at a typical urban hospital, 70-80% of the patients seen in a hospital ER could have been seen more cost efficiently at an urgent care center. Decentralization of care from an expensive hospital to off campus, strategically placed urgent care centers would have left MLK with only the 20-30% of patients who were appropriately seen in the ER with life threatening emergencies. Additionally, the overall cost of care would have been sharply diminished.
The LA County Supervisors openly admit that because they have no training in healthcare matters, they had to heavily rely upon advisors, and consultants, who frequently did not offer the best advise... [which should have included the recommendation for decentralized care from busy County hospital emergency rooms to expedite treatment of more acutely ill ER patients, while at the same time sharply reducing the cost for ambulatory patients [seen in off campus urgent care centers].
There are already enough federal and state healthcare dollars available, which as set forth above, could be spent in a more cost-efficient manner, that could then permit Medi-Cal payments to be competitive with other states.Many California insurance companies are known as "dead beat payors" in that they engage in "low pay and no pay" tactics that have threatened the financial viability of many area hospitals. One such insurance company was fined 1.3 billion dollars last year by the State of California Department of Insurance.
DELANEY SMITH JR.PHARM.D.,M.D. |
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