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Jackson Health: Miami Hospital System In 'Death Spiral'

Jackson Health Miami Hospital System In Death Spir

CHRISTINE ARMARIO   03/10/10 06:41 PM ET   AP

MIAMI — The city's major hospital network, which runs Miami's only round-the-clock trauma center and is a safety net for the poor and uninsured, is running out of money and could close, a predicament that illustrates the precarious financial state of many hospitals around the country.

The Jackson Health System will have little cash on hand by the end of March if it does not receive a $67 million advance from the county, said Marcos Lapciuc, treasurer of the Public Health Trust, the institution's governing board.

"We are very close, if not already in, a health care death spiral," Chief Operating Officer David Small said.

Jackson could run out of cash and shut by May or sooner, Lapciuc said, and the county mayor said officials were preparing to advance the hospital some money.

"Sadly, it's not all that unique," Larry S. Gage, president of the National Association of Public Hospitals & Health System, said of financial difficulties like the one Jackson is facing.

Millions of people across the country have lost jobs and the insurance that goes with them over the last two years. Hospitals, including in the Jackson network, are dealing with more uninsured patients, at the same time they are facing cuts in state and county funding. That has translated into cuts in staff, services and administrative costs at many hospitals across the nation. The financial woes come as President Barack Obama continues to push for a stalled health care overhaul.

Gage pointed to other examples of extreme financial problems. He said the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation which, depending on state legislation, is looking at anywhere from half-billion to a billion dollars in deficits soon.

Several major California county systems could have deficits in the hundreds of millions, Gage said.

"Obviously the net effect for some patients will be if a facility or services closes down at a particular location you will have to go somewhere else," Gage said.

Jackson Health system is considering cutting 4,500 jobs and closing two hospitals, which have about 500 beds combined. Lapciuc said supplies are currently adequate but, "vendors sooner or later are going to start being very wary." Besides the county, Jackson is looking to state and federal sources for help.

Jackson Memorial is the only Level One trauma center, capable of handling the most severe medical emergencies, set up to provide 24-hour emergency care in Miami-Dade, the most populous county in Florida and the 8th largest in the nation.

Jackson sought to reassure patients.

"Although Jackson is in the midst of a financial crisis, we want to assure all patients – past, current and future – that our hospitals, emergency rooms and clinics throughout Miami-Dade County are open for business," a hospital statement said.

Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Alvarez wrote in a letter to the hospital and board executives that he has "always been willing to discuss possible advances of funds" and that the county manager is preparing such an advance.

Lapciuc said a flood in indigent care as a result of the recession and not enough public revenues to cover the costs helped lead to the crisis at Jackson.

He said the institution is providing approximately $600 million in charity care this year, while receiving about $400 million in public funds – a $200 million charity health care shortfall.

Caroline Steinberg, vice president for trends analysis with the American Hospital Association, said that nationwide the proportion of emergency department patients with no insurance is on the rise.

"And many hospitals are seeing more patients covered by Medicaid and other public programs," she said. "And that's concerning because those programs tend to pay significantly less than the cost of care."

Steinberg said nine out of 10 hospitals nationwide have cut back, with more than half reducing staff; eight in 10 have cut administrative expenses; and one in five is reducing services.

"The economy is really taking its toll on hospitals," Steinberg said.

Ellen Kugler, executive director of the National Association of Urban Hospitals, said that when a large safety net hospital closes it can have a domino effect – putting increased pressure on surrounding medical centers.

"Those patients aren't going to have better insurance or more money that they'll bring with them to a new hospital instead," she said.

Kugler said Obama's health care proposal would help in insuring more individuals, but expressed concern that programs aimed at safety net hospitals will be cut in the long term.

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12:13 PM on 03/10/2010
Shocker. A hospital that is forced to provide services regardless of a customers' ability to pay is insolvent. Film at 11.

That's exactly why healthcare should be funded by a sales tax not a payroll tax. If you're in this country you pay into the healthcare system regardless of your employment status.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
gino618
11:42 AM on 03/10/2010
And yet in Canada - a man waits weeks for help with a brain tumor and has to come to the US for help, and then back in Canada, they won't pay for his meds. It's a bureaucratic decision.

http://nalert.blogspot.com/2010/03/sick-canadian-man-faces-bankruptcy.html
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moleif
01:27 PM on 03/10/2010
Please check your facts before you slam Canada's excellent healthcare system. Here's an excerpt from Mr. Kent's website.

"In January of 2000, Kent had a seizure and was diagnosed with a Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM) tumour, It was the size of a golf ball, in the right frontal lobe of his brain. Kent successfully underwent 2 skull surgeries, maximum radiation and Temodal chemo treatment at the Cross Cancer Institute in Edmonton.

The surgeries resulted in minor memory loss and Kent remained free of cancer for 7 years.

The Cross Cancer institute ordered an urgent MRI on Sept 10th 2009. It revealed that there are currently 3 tumours in Kent’s right frontal lobe, covering a 10 cm area which has expanded into the centre of his brain. The Mayo Clinic has access to drugs that are not yet approved in Canada and they have surgeons who can conduct motor mapping to reduce the risks associated with brain surgery. Kent's surgery will take place in an MRI surgical suite under the capable hands of Dr. Ian Parney and team. The Mayo Clinic in Rochester Minnesota is ranked No.1 in Neurology and Neurosurgery in the U.S. News & World Report Best Hospitals rankings."
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
pfrogger
01:47 PM on 03/10/2010
thank you.
fanned.

facts and evidence are the only thing that will shine light on the lies and ignorance of many of these people.
in Canada, medical care is based on need. if it's an emergency, they get bumped to the head of the line. and then people are prioritized based on need. everyone gets int he same line. prince and pauper treated alike. based on medical need not money.
in Canada:
- 45,000 people don't die every year because of lack of access to health care.
- a doctor and the patient decide what to do, and insurance company bureaucrats, with limited medical knowledge, doesn't decide
- no one goes bankrupt due to medical bills
- meds are cheaper because they bargain with companies on behalf of the canadian people
- health care is seen as a right and not the privilege of the rich

of course the rich are against it. having to wait in line with the normal people and treated based on need not money. oh the horror.
04:11 PM on 03/10/2010
I know Mayo Clinic has a wonderful reputation. However...

If your friend ever needs a different surgeon, Dr. Allan Friedman at Duke University Medical Center can successfully perform surgeries no other Surgeon will attempt.
yappnmutt
humping legs for liberty
01:28 PM on 03/10/2010
and yet in the usa these stories are so prevalent they don't deserve a single column inch or pixel in any paper.
11:42 AM on 03/10/2010
The reason Miami hospitals are going down the tubes is the same reason hospitals in LA, SF and elsewhere went bankrupt: Illegal immigrants. Here is an expert from TCPalm.com (since many would not go to a link):

TALLAHASSEE -- Mentally ill patients are being placed on waiting lists for treatment because Florida’s mental health institutions are crowded with illegal immigrants.

The crisis puts Florida at the forefront of a national debate over whether illegal immigrants should enjoy the same public health-care rights as legal residents. Florida’s mental health facilities have spent $19.6 million to care for undocumented immigrants.

State officials want to turn the illegal immigrants over to federal immigration officers. The Republican-led Legislature could be sympathetic to the idea. ''If the state of Florida is spending money on illegal immigrants. . . it would be more appropriate for them to go back to their countries and get treatment there,’’ said Rep. Paige Kreegel, R-Punta Gorda.

To immigration critics, that is too much money. Bob Dane, spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform in Washington, D.C., which wants to reduce immigration, said legal residents should not have to wait for health care given to undocumented immigrants.Florida has no choice but to pursue deportation options, he said. ''Is it really fair to deny legal residents care to give treatment to illegal residents?’’ he said.

To the consequence denier below, does that answer you question?
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
pfrogger
02:01 PM on 03/10/2010
this is just plain sad. the complete link: http://www.tcpalm.com/news/2010/mar/09/mentally-ill-put-on-waiting-lists-because-fla/?partner=popular
you cut and paste the parts that support your story and not the rest.
just simply pathetic.
you put "Florida’s mental health facilities have spent $19.6 million to care for undocumented immigrants."
the story actually reads: "Florida’s mental health facilities have spent $19.6 million to care for at least 86 undocumented immigrants counted during an informal November survey and more unidentified illegal immigrants could be in custody, state officials said"
the story itself is fairly sloppy research. 19.6 million for at least 86 and maybe more undocumented immigrants. for 86 or more? well which is it?
they don't have any real numbers. the story says "informal November survey". INFORMAL!
are you kidding me? this piece of journalistic laziness is what you're using to support your argument? and you also plagarized by cuting and pasting to skew the story your way.
just simply pathetic. lie, cheat, and steal. whatever works right?
02:24 PM on 03/10/2010
No, I tried to edit out some wording because I was limited to 250 words or less. And adding an acknowledgement of who it was written by hardly passes as plagarism, t_ard.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
pfrogger
11:36 AM on 03/10/2010
CEO?
well how much does that person make? how about the rest of them? it seems like they're not doing their jobs. take all the salaries of the CEO and major execs and add that up. I bet it adds up to way more than a million.
is this what passes for capitalism. people do horrible jobs, and can't do what they're supposed to and so we ... what, keep them on? are you Fing kidding me.
are they somehow a protected class that they can't be touched.
and why do these corporations always go begging to the government. the old "we can't provide services to your citizens so the government needs to give us more cash". so they failed. they are horrible at their job. and they use people as hostages to fleece even more taxpayer money from the government.
this thing called "capitalism" and these people who run it are all scam artists. they're con people and thieves.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andy Gross
11:36 AM on 03/10/2010
Send the illegals home now.
12:20 PM on 03/10/2010
You got that right.
xansam
all want 2 eat, none want 2B eaten
11:34 AM on 03/10/2010
And there is no such thing as Death Panels? Ha!
11:15 AM on 03/10/2010
This will be an unpopular post but......illegal immigration causes much of the problem
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
pfrogger
11:26 AM on 03/10/2010
can you prove it?
do you have any numbers? facts or evidence?

of course not, who needs those, right?
xansam
all want 2 eat, none want 2B eaten
11:36 AM on 03/10/2010
there is a huge illegal population in South Florida. That is some of the problem, but no health insurance is the large issue. Still need a reason for public option?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
WhatTheHolyHeck
smiting trolls since 1984
11:37 AM on 03/10/2010
A study in Texas in 2006 indicated that undocumented individuals actually contribute more financially to their community than those who are legally in the country. They consistently paid more in taxes (yes, they pay taxes), pay hospital bills more reliably, and don't default on mortgages as frequently. It was really stunning how the facts - gathered by employees of a Republican state administration no less - totally contradicted the talking points commonly used by conservatives to use the immigration boogeyman as a fear tactic.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
moonflowerjewelry
Buy American made, no excuses.
10:49 AM on 03/10/2010
Well, America, we sold out our priorities to corporate interests long ago. Hospitals and trauma centers have been closing around the country for the last two decades... we will reach critical mass soon wherein NOBODY will have access to care except the very, very wealthy...
Third world status, here we come!
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usna73
We are all in this together
10:36 AM on 03/10/2010
Doomed. This will only get worse without HCR. That giant sucking sound you hear will be hospitals gasping to help sick people who will show up in ever increasing numbers with even worse conditions, who could not access healthcare otherwise.

The people who have stonewalled this effort to stop the bleeding either are morally bankrupt or living in suspended disbelief. "It will be the other guy."

More delay will guarantee a disaster ahead. I hope that the Congress will pass what is on the table and work around the margins over time.
10:14 AM on 03/10/2010
Gee, I wonder what they would save on administration if it was single payer . . . about 63 million ?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peter007
10:32 AM on 03/10/2010
You sound like a used car salesman trying to sell Toyotas.

" Sure, we'll pay now in return for future benefits."
I trust you.

Sure,,,,,,
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
moleif
10:46 AM on 03/10/2010
The US would save roughly $870 billion per year if you moved a single payer system. That's why the status quo doesn't want change.