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Jilly_in_VA

(10,846 posts)
Sun Nov 20, 2022, 11:06 AM Nov 2022

In the Mississippi Delta, a hospital anchors its community. Now it's in danger of closing.

Betty Sibley had just laid down to rest after a shower last month when she realized something was wrong.

There were hives bubbling up on her arms and her throat was beginning to swell shut. Both were signs that she was suffering from a potentially life-threatening allergic reaction.

A first responder injected her with an EpiPen in her thigh and an ambulance raced her to Greenwood Leflore Hospital, roughly 5 miles away, where emergency room staff took over, administering steroid shots.

“I would have died if it had not been for this hospital,” she said.

Now, the hospital she turned to in an emergency is struggling to keep its doors open.

In the past year, the rural hospital’s cash reserves have plummeted, and patient traffic has slowed. Many of those who do come are uninsured, meaning unless they pay out-of-pocket, or pursue some other form of financial assistance, the hospital is unlikely to be reimbursed for their care. And the Medicare loan that helped the hospital in the pandemic now costs Greenwood Leflore more than $100,000 per month.

Hospital leaders have tried to slow the crisis through layoffs and slashing services. Administrators scrapped pay incentives that had helped keep the hospital staffed. This fall Greenwood Leflore closed its labor and delivery unit because there wasn’t enough staff. On Nov. 30, the hospital’s pulmonology clinic will close, a decision made after low patient volume and poor revenue.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/mississippi-delta-hospital-greenwood-leflore-rcna57949

This is happening to rural hospitals all over the country. More thoughts below.

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In the Mississippi Delta, a hospital anchors its community. Now it's in danger of closing. (Original Post) Jilly_in_VA Nov 2022 OP
Some thoughts on this Jilly_in_VA Nov 2022 #1

Jilly_in_VA

(10,846 posts)
1. Some thoughts on this
Sun Nov 20, 2022, 11:15 AM
Nov 2022

The article doesn't say who owns the hospital or what the CEO earns. Most CEOs earn outrageous salaries, plus there are innumerable "assistant CEOS" whose usual purpose, as far as this retired RN could ever see, is to clutter up the halls and think of ways to make everyone else's job harder. Don't get me started on them.

There is a corporation called Rennova Health that comes in, billing itself as a "savior" for these rural and small town hospitals. Its actual purpose is to suck all the money they can out of the hospital and then close it, usually for good. Meanwhile, its obscenely wealthy CEO, Seamus Lagan, hides out in the Caymans or Bahamas or someplace where he can't be extradited from, counting his money. I expect them to be the next vulture in the sky over Greenwood, MS. I've already seen them in action in Tennessee and Kansas.

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