Jump to content

Menu

Hospital closures?


Recommended Posts

This is the first I've heard about it. The hospital here is TERRIBLE, so I can't see how it would change things much around here, but it is a source of jobs, and a last resort for true emergencies...

 

I'm really concerned that a lot of the hospitals are more rural ones and then care access requires REALLY driving a long way, which isn't good in an emergency...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm really concerned that a lot of the hospitals are more rural ones and then care access requires REALLY driving a long way, which isn't good in an emergency...

 

Yes, I work in a rural nursing home, located a few blocks from the only hospital within an hour or so. If it were to close, it would be disastrous for us. I can't imagine we'd be able to stay open. Our residents are, by definition, too unstable to be that far from higher level medical care.

 

(I have no reason to believe it's going to close, and would be rather surprised if it did - it's situated where it is for a reason. But it would be horrible for my family if it did, both from a medical care perspective and because it would demolish the job opportunities in the area for me.)

Edited by ocelotmom
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes, I work in a rural nursing home, located a few blocks from the only hospital within an hour or so. If it were to close, it would be disastrous for us. I can't imagine we'd be able to stay open. Our residents are, by definition, too unstable to be that far from higher level medical care.

 

That's exactly the kind of stuff I'm worried about. :(

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My guess is that many of these hospitals would likely be sold to hospital corporations -- the current owners are going to need to recoup some of their investment, and do have to look at the jobs and the community needing medical care -- so I think that while that number of hospitals may be affected, the number that would actually close would be smaller, though the change in ownership may still cause a lower standard of care in some cases.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's the current declaration, yes. Can we please stay away from that side of it and instead on what would/will happen?

 

I think some would close, but most would not. There would likely be incentives on part of those communities and states that lose hospitals to draw new medical organizations in. Some hospitals might have someone in the state step in and continue operations as a non-profit community hospital.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My guess is that many of these hospitals would likely be sold to hospital corporations -- the current owners are going to need to recoup some of their investment, and do have to look at the jobs and the community needing medical care -- so I think that while that number of hospitals may be affected, the number that would actually close would be smaller, though the change in ownership may still cause a lower standard of care in some cases.

 

I think some would close, but most would not. There would likely be incentives on part of those communities and states that lose hospitals to draw new medical organizations in. Some hospitals might have someone in the state step in and continue operations as a non-profit community hospital.

 

I hope something like that would happen, thanks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is really scary! We already have an hour and a half drive for a halfway decent hospital (notice I didn't say a good hospital :glare:) The 'hospital' here in town is a couple rooms on the end of the nursing home :001_huh: :confused: with NO regular staff. Just the nursing home nurses. There is not even a doctor there unless somebody goes then he gets paged. If you are 'hospitalized' you are in a nursing home room. Dead serious. This really scares me :001_huh:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is really scary! We already have an hour and a half drive for a halfway decent hospital (notice I didn't say a good hospital :glare:) The 'hospital' here in town is a couple rooms on the end of the nursing home :001_huh: :confused: with NO regular staff. Just the nursing home nurses. There is not even a doctor there unless somebody goes then he gets paged. If you are 'hospitalized' you are in a nursing home room. Dead serious. This really scares me :001_huh:

 

Yikes! :grouphug:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My guess is that many of these hospitals would likely be sold to hospital corporations -- the current owners are going to need to recoup some of their investment, and do have to look at the jobs and the community needing medical care -- so I think that while that number of hospitals may be affected, the number that would actually close would be smaller, though the change in ownership may still cause a lower standard of care in some cases.

 

I think some would close, but most would not. There would likely be incentives on part of those communities and states that lose hospitals to draw new medical organizations in. Some hospitals might have someone in the state step in and continue operations as a non-profit community hospital.

 

I've been following this pretty closely, too. I've heard some of the same things. We may be imagining boarded-up windows and sick people out on sidewalks but that's not how it will work.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is really scary! We already have an hour and a half drive for a halfway decent hospital (notice I didn't say a good hospital :glare:) The 'hospital' here in town is a couple rooms on the end of the nursing home :001_huh: :confused: with NO regular staff. Just the nursing home nurses. There is not even a doctor there unless somebody goes then he gets paged. If you are 'hospitalized' you are in a nursing home room. Dead serious. This really scares me :001_huh:

 

Eh, the "no doctor" part is the only part that would scare me, assuming there is adequate medical equipment and staff numbers. Nursing home nurses have the same training as hospital nurses, and presumably the nurses in this situation have the training to stabilize someone for transport and so on. The main hurdle we face at my nursing home is that we don't have the equipment and meds available at a hospital, not that we aren't capable of using them if we had them.

 

I think some would close, but most would not. There would likely be incentives on part of those communities and states that lose hospitals to draw new medical organizations in. Some hospitals might have someone in the state step in and continue operations as a non-profit community hospital.

 

That would be my thought, too. My original post assumed it had to do with financial issues, as my quick google didn't turn up anything Catholic-related (I'm beginning to worry that Google's search-profiling business might be screwing up my results). My local hospital is not religiously-based, and if it did close for religious reasons, I can't imagine that it wouldn't be taken over by a non-religious corporation.

Edited by ocelotmom
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Those hospitals will likely not actually close, but rather they will be bought out by bigger hospitals. That has been happening around here, and now we have very little choice and the prices are going up at a very fast pace without competiton. We now drive an hour for specialists to a city with a lot of competition and thus lower prices for the same services. It stinks, but that is the reality. Monopolies are everywhere, and healthcare is no different.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wouldn't worry too much about it. There are already 20 states, including huge ones like California, Illinois, and New York, in which the law mandates that employers - including Catholic hospitals and universities, but not parishes or churches - are required to provide their employees with insurance coverage that includes contraception.

 

Those states haven't seen a massive withdrawal of Catholic services. They haven't even really seen protests. It's not clear to me why this has suddenly become a firestorm now.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Rivka, Rivka, first baffled and now befuddeled: national politics.

 

You have to think of Lily Tomlin's line: no matter how cynical I get, I just can't keep up.

 

Sometimes - perhaps often, between now and November - "It's not clear to me why..." is best parsed as, "If I speculated about why, I'd be banned." :tongue_smilie:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sometimes - perhaps often, between now and November - "It's not clear to me why..." is best parsed as, "If I speculated about why, I'd be banned." :tongue_smilie:

 

Maybe I'm getting jaded. Or maybe I just have my eyes a little more open, but man, what a long, smelly trail of diarrhea this primary is becoming ....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...