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RitcheyRch
08-10-2007, 09:06 PM
One less emergency room if we ever need it.
http://cbs2.com/topstories/local_story_222162035.html
Federal regulators said Friday that they are pulling $200 million in funding from a troubled hospital that serves one of the city's poorest neighborhoods, forcing it to all but shut down.
Upon learning of the failure, Los Angeles County health officials immediately implemented a long-established contingency plan and closed the hospital's emergency room at 7 p.m. In-patient services will be shuttered over the next two weeks.
"I speak on behalf of the entire Department of Health Services when I say how disappointed we all are that the hospital failed to meet the national standards of care despite the best efforts of hundreds and hundreds of dedicated employees," said Dr. Bruce Chernof, county health director.
The decision came after the county-run Martin Luther King Jr.-Harbor Hospital failed two federal inspections.
"We brought every resource to bear, but in the end it just wasn't enough, fast enough," Dr. Bruce Chernof said.
King-Harbor will remain open 16 hours a day, seven days a week, to offer outpatient care to people with routine medical problems, Chernof said. Ambulances will be available to take the more seriously ill to other hospitals.
During the past few years, Los Angeles County tried to improve patient care through disciplining workers, reorganizing management, closing the trauma unit and reducing the number of inpatient beds to 48.
Yet Herb Kuhn, acting deputy administrator for the U.S. Centers of Medicare and Medical Services, said a federal inspection as recently as last month found "conditions at the facility have placed the health and safety of patients at great risk."
"While some progress has been made, significant problems persist," Kuhn said in a statement.
The federal agency plans to end its hospital provider agreement with King-Harbor on Wednesday. The hospital can apply for reinstatement, but that would take three to four months because federal regulators would want to be assured that King-Harbor's problems have been corrected.
The federal action means the hospital is no longer eligible for reimbursement for the costs of caring for Medicare patients. The county has warned that loss of the funding -- about half the hospital's budget -- would force King-Harbor to close.
King-Harbor, which has about 1,600 employees, handled about 50,000 emergency room patients last year. A contingency plan is already in place to shift patients to other hospitals, and officials have said they would try to find a private operator to take over the facility and reopen it, perhaps in a year.
"This is good news because it brings closure to this never-ending saga," county Supervisor Michael Antonovich said in a statement. "It allows the county to move forward in bringing quality medical care to an area where the status quo chose to keep a bag over their head."
The hospital was built after the 1965 Watts riots to bring health care to poor, minority communities in south Los Angeles. In recent years, poor patient care has been blamed for several deaths.
A woman died in May after writhing untreated on the floor of the emergency room lobby for 45 minutes. In February, a brain tumor patient languished in the emergency room for four days before his family drove him to another hospital for emergency surgery.
The hospital failed a federal inspection in September 2006 but managed to remain open under a reorganization that shifted services to Harbor-UCLA Medical Center and reduced inpatient beds from 250 to 48.
The second inspection last month found that the hospital still had failed to comply with federal standards in eight of 23 areas, ranging from nursing services to patients' rights, according to a letter to King's administrator, Antoinette Epps.

Boatcop
08-11-2007, 05:27 AM
I wonder if Hillary knows about this?
It's the future for all of us if her socialistic, universal, Government run health care ideas are implemented.

Miss Perfect
08-11-2007, 05:52 AM
One less emergency room if we ever need it.
If a hospital fails accredidation, you really don't want to go to it anyways. They need to close that thing down, get new management in there and then re-open once they get their stuff together.

burtandnancy2
08-11-2007, 06:50 AM
Perfect is right, they are punishing the community for the failure of the administrators. Typical beaurocratic thinking...

LOWRIVER2
08-11-2007, 07:08 AM
They call it "Killer King" for a reason. No public safety officer has been taken to that ER in over 20 years.

RP2
08-11-2007, 07:40 AM
They call it "Killer King" for a reason. No public safety officer has been taken to that ER in over 20 years.
You are correct... the place is a total shiat hole. When we have shooting victims transported their, we know it's just a matter of time before their dead.

RitcheyRch
08-11-2007, 08:07 AM
I knew it was bad but didnt realize it was that bad.
If a hospital fails accredidation, you really don't want to go to it anyways. They need to close that thing down, get new management in there and then re-open once they get their stuff together.
They call it "Killer King" for a reason. No public safety officer has been taken to that ER in over 20 years.
You are correct... the place is a total shiat hole. When we have shooting victims transported their, we know it's just a matter of time before their dead.

LOWRIVER2
08-12-2007, 11:49 AM
California Hospital
Cedars Sinai
Harbor General
USCMC
Those are where you want to go if you are seriously injured,
UCLA is too far west, but good. Just too far for those working in the greater LA basin.