Danville Regional CEO gets 18-month check up
Register & Bee Published: May 9, 2009
Jerel Humphrey, CEO of Danville Regional Medical Center, took time last week to reflect on what has been accomplished at the hospital during the almost 18 months he has been at the helm.
Humphrey, most often seen without a tie and wearing a sweater vest, laughs and jokes easily, but quickly turns serious when talking about what has transpired for the good and what still needs to be done at the hospital since its purchase by LifePoint Hospitals Inc. four years ago.
In a January 2008 interview with the Danville Register & Bee three months into his tenure, Humphrey said the hospital was still putting its executive team together. He said Tuesday that had been accomplished.
“We’ve now had a year-plus of an administration team working together,” he said. “We have rounded out our team and have Becky Logan as our chief nursing officer and Mark Anderson as our chief financial officer. Eric Barber has been added as a chief operating officer, and our chief medical officer is Tim Starling, a past president of the medical staff, as well as having served 32 years as a nephrologist with the Danville Urology Clinic. Frank Campbell has become the chairman of the board.”
Another area that has become more focused in the past year has been community outreach. Although the hospital has “sporadically” helped with community organizations in the past, Humphrey said this past year the hospital has tried to be more consistent with it.
“(Recently) we’ve done fundraising with the Free Clinic of Danville, signed a contract with PATHS and worked with Salvation Army,” he said.
Other community organizations that have been supported by Danville Regional through sponsorships and donations include Habitat for Humanity, the Free Clinic of Danville, the Boy Scouts, Special Olympics, the Langhorne House, the Danville Life Saving Crew and the YMCA, among many others.
The hospital’s 2008 Community Benefit Report reveals it has spent $21 million on charity care and bad debt; $172.1 million on government-sponsored health care (Medicare and Medicaid); $705,104 in community benefit programs ($35,820 in financial contributions, $94,585 in health professionals education and $574,699 in physician recruitment); and $896,000 in state taxes, $224,000 in local sales tax and $832,000 in property taxes.
Recalling the initial theme for his leadership as building trust with the community, Humphrey said he has made himself available and given talks to several community groups.
“The feedback has been that people appreciate open communication, our recommitment to the community and our recruitment efforts to bring in new physicians,” he said.
In the past year, 12 new physicians have been recruited, a process that can be lengthy.
“We identify people who want to come and then we have to get them properly credentialed to be on our medical staff and then sign any agreements involved,” Humphrey said, adding with a laugh, “And then they have to come.”
The number of physicians leaving the area has “trickled,” he said.
The hospital has received nothing but good comments about the re-affiliation of the Duke Heart Center with the hospital’s Heart Center of the Piedmont at Danville Regional Medical Center for the hospital’s cardiovascular services, according to Humphrey.
“The agreements with Duke are fully signed, and Dr. Richard Embrey, the cardiothoracic surgeon, has seen a doubling of his cases already,” Humphrey said. “The (open-heart surgery) volumes are very much coming back.”
In another partnership, Danville Regional is working with the LifePoint-owned Martinsville Memorial Hospital to provide cardiology care for their patients.
“The need for cardiology coverage in Martinsville is greater than the cardiologists in the area can currently provide, so we met with and requested that the Danville cardiologists assist with the coverage issue,” Humphrey said. “To their credit, they became credentialed and privileged to practice in Martinsville. Duke Heart Services is also lending its support with one of their cardiologists covering two days a week and the Danville cardiologists covering three days a week, which includes some Saturdays.”
He said that was an intermediate measure, since the Martinsville hospital is currently recruiting cardiologists.
Danville Regional has also partnered with the Edward Via Virginia College of Osteopathic Medicine to bring in a residency program, which Humphrey said has brought positive comments from the community.
“The hospitalist program has also been getting a lot of positive comments from physicians and the patients being taken care of,” Humphrey said.
Hospitalists care for the patients in the hospital once they are admitted by their own physician.
Four hospitalists out of the current 15 on staff are scheduled to leave, one to pursue a fellowship and others for family reasons; however, the hospital is actively recruiting for replacements.
Millions in investments
Since LifePoint purchased Danville Regional Medical Center, the corporation has invested about $45 million in the hospital for facility improvements and equipment.
“We really do hear a lot of positive comments about the continued investment into the infrastructure of the hospital,” Humphrey said.
He cited the nursing staff as another big plus for the hospital and said that the usage of contract nursing staff has been eliminated, which he calls a “major accomplishment.”
“We have about a 5 percent turnover rate now, which is outstanding, and we are very proud of that,” he said. “The majority of the class (graduating from the hospital’s School of Nursing) this year will be hired. That’s always our game plan with the nursing school program.”
The nursing staff is “basically” fully staffed at this time, although Humphrey said that there is always some ebb and flow.
The patient census, or the number of admitted patients in the hospital at any given time, also has peaks and valleys, he said, but remains solid.
“We’ve seen a little softening of the census with the economic downturn and people putting elective procedures off as long as can,” he said. “Some of the physicians also say their patient loads are up and down. It’s really uneven right now.”
In other initiatives in the past year, the hospital has just opened a wound treatment center and an inpatient rehabilitation center and purchased another bloodmobile.
Revisiting impressions
New to the area 18 months ago, Humphrey said that his initial impressions of the Danville community were that “the people in Danville are open and friendly, there is a great future with all the economic developments and nobody knows how to merge.”
On Tuesday, Humphrey revisited those observations and said that the Danville community is still open and friendly and that, although economic development has been “stymied,” he remains “cautiously optimistic.”
On that last count, however, he holds to his original opinion, as many others do, that Danvillians are still merging-impaired.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
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«Oldest ‹Older 601 – 800 of 1159 Newer› Newest»So who else is leaving? One surgeon, maybe another specialist or two?
no body is leaving, only if Centra (another outsider) comes in, will force more specialists to leave. They are for profit too with day surgery, no not-for profit can exist and they will take financial decision in thier favor, wont look at community. They threatened Danville physicians to be with them or they will bring their own physicians to override Danville physicians who are already part of our community. Danville economy is a big factor always as previous posting said whether you deny it or not. Would centra like competition putting up our physicians there??? and dont say again I am an lifepoint employee!
Don't blame the economy for the Doctors exit from Danville. Medical problems continue no matter what the economy does. Lifepoint is the sole blame for the loss of our doctors and it will get worse. Centra will bring with it some competent medical care and we need that. Lifepoint has lost the trust of many locals and that is a fact you can not deny.
How about poor doctors costing themselves money? The dark, nasty truth is that the some of the doctors in Danville aren't very good, treat their patients poorly, get poor results when they do procedures, and then blame the hospital when patients decide to go to better doctors in Lynchburg.
Remember when DRMC was making headlines for having the highest death rate for heart attack and heart failure in the country? There was a Danville doctor directing the care of every one of those patients who died.
This week marks Becky Logan's last days as CNO.
NURSES at DRMC......Let the celebration begin!
Of course we have some substandard doctors in Danville. Lifepoints reputation prevents a reputable doctor from coming to Danville. A hospital with a bad reputation and poor customer service record will tarnish the associated physicians reputation as well. That means we can only recruit marginal medical care at best. They have chase some good doctors out of here.
there are good and bad doctors everywhere, go and ask Lynchburg community. things happpen in medical field. All doctors with centra are not perfect, and, I heard there are unsatisfied physicians there too in Centra's network. so dont jump to another ship which will sail away to Lynchburg with economy, profits and leave DANVILLE as a basic place as Centra did to other towns.There is nothing to gain from past, keep repeating because Lifepoint bought it! I would go for saving our specialists, economy and of course for best medical care in Danville. New CEO is all for community and heart care is gone way beyond where it was 5 yrs ago when that news came out.
Actually, bad doctors gravitate to bad hospitals, because it is easier to hide substandard care and, sometimes literally, "get away with murder."
wake up, a substandard care can't be hidden by anyone.We have laws for that! And, no human is made perfect, not even centra doctors!!If they are so good, they would be so busy that they wont need to come to Danville but they are here because Centra is money hungry too. They are not here for "best care", they want to make their finances more strong. Luchburg lost a lot more population during recession than Danville, its a fact!
If some people love Centra care, who is stopping them to travel 70 miles? Centra wont pay penny to our economy and as taxes being "NOT FOR PROFIT"!!!
Wow, that last post made no sense whatsoever. Centra, Lifepoint - whatever. Let 'em fight it out. I wish we could sell tickets to the public hearing next Friday. It's gonna be a riot. I think I'll set up a rotten fruit stand outside so people have something to throw. Hope they have metal detectors at the door.
No matter how it turns out, we lose.
The meeting will hopefully bring forth the many who want medical care outside of Lifepoint, but I am sure it will bring out a few loonies. To the one who posted at 11:17 today: Learn to spell and try to make sense when you post!!!
"medicaid pay them exactly the same amount as the non-profits for a procedure or ER visit."
True however not for profits do not have the high tax and CxO salaries to pay, also no shareholders to kiss the rear ends of.
Yeah, but non-profits don't pay sales tax, income tax or property tax, either.
If Centra was for-profit, they'd pay around $2-3 million per year in property taxes on all the real estate and buildings they own up in Lynchburg.
ANDDDDD, non-profit hospital CEO's make, on average, FAR MORE than their for-profit counterparts.
If you look up Centra's 2008 Form 990 on the internet, you will see that Centra's CEO, George Dawson, was paid $1,370,295 and Vice President Tom Jividen made $524,989.
Yessir, it sure is great to do well by doing good.
I find it hard to believe they act any differently than a for-profit would.
"FAR MORE than their for-profit counterparts."
Ok , However, there are far more CEOs COOs CFOs etc etc on and on in the FOR profit lifepoint than any dozen nonprofits combined, not to mention the ever grumpy stockholders, no not for profit could ever waste that much money on nonhealthcare, nonproducing crud.
Nonprofit Hospitals Flex Pricing Power
In Roanoke, Va., Carilion's Fees Exceed Those of Competitors; The $4,727 Colonoscopy
By JOHN CARREYROU
ROANOKE, Va. -- In 1989, the U.S. Department of Justice tried but failed to prevent a merger between nonprofit Carilion Health System and this former railroad town's other hospital. The merger, it warned in an unsuccessful antitrust lawsuit, would create a monopoly over medical care in the area.
Nearly two decades later, the cost of health care in the Roanoke Valley -- a region in southwestern Virginia with a population of 300,000 -- is soaring. Health-insurance rates in Roanoke have gone from being the lowest in the state to the highest.
Carilion's market clout is manifest in other ways. With eight hospitals, 11,000 employees and $1 billion in assets, the tax-exempt hospital system has become one of the dominant players in the Roanoke Valley's economy. Its dozens of subsidiaries include businesses ranging from athletic clubs to a venture-capital fund.
The power of nonprofit hospital systems like Carilion over their regional communities has increased in recent years as their incomes have surged. Critics charge this is creating untaxed local health-care monopolies that drive the costs of care higher for patients and businesses.
Carilion acknowledges its influence in the local community but says there is nothing untoward about it. The hospital says it doesn't have a monopoly over the Roanoke Valley health-care market because it faces robust competition from Lewis-Gale Medical Center, a hospital located in nearby Salem, Va., and owned by for-profit chain HCA Inc.
Carilion says it charges more for certain procedures because it has to subsidize operations such as an emergency department and treatment for the uninsured. Edward Murphy, Carilion's CEO, says the high cost of health care in Roanoke reflects the national increase in such costs, which he says is driven by overutilization of medical services. Carilion is converting to a clinic model, in which doctors are employees of the hospital system and work more closely together to coordinate care, in an effort to cut down on unnecessary tests and procedures, he says. "Fragmentation is the enemy of quality" and affordable care, Dr. Murphy says.
The Roanoke City General District Court in downtown Roanoke devotes one morning a week to Carilion cases -- lawsuits the hospital files against patients who haven't paid bills.
However, the clinic project has provoked a backlash from a group of local independent doctors, who say it is designed to stifle competition.
Originally set up to serve the poor, nonprofit hospitals account for the majority of U.S. hospitals. They are exempt from taxes and are supposed to channel income they generate back into operations, while providing benefits to their communities. But they have come under fire from patient advocates and members of Congress for stinting on charity care even as they amass large cash hoards, build new facilities and award big paychecks to their executives.
Fueled by large, untaxed investment gains, Carilion's profits have risen over the past five years, reaching $107 million last year. Over the same period, the total annual compensation of its chief executive, Dr. Murphy, nearly tripled to $2.07 million. His predecessor, Thomas Robertson, received a lump-sum pension from Carilion of $7.4 million in 2003, on top of more than $2 million in previous pension payouts.
Carilion says Dr. Murphy's compensation is in line with comparable health-care organizations and notes he doesn't receive car allowances, a spousal allowance or club memberships. It says Mr. Robertson's pension accrued over a 32-year career at Carilion.
Carilion estimates it receives about $50 million a year in tax exemptions. It dispensed $42 million in charity care in 2007 and $30 million in 2006.
After the 1989 merger, Carilion continued to operate Roanoke's two hospitals separately. It later consolidated the hospital boards and in 2006, transferred most of Roanoke Community Hospital's staff and services to a renovated and enlarged Roanoke Memorial Hospital.
The moves eliminated any hospital competition in Roanoke proper, enabling Carilion to raise its prices and contributing to a spike in health-insurance rates in the region, one of the least affluent parts of the state, according to local doctors and health-insurance brokers.
The construction of a new medical campus around Roanoke Memorial Hospital began several years ago.
Alan Bayse, founder of a local benefits-consulting firm who has sold health insurance in the area for 30 years, says health-insurance rates in the Roanoke Valley used to be 20% lower than in Richmond, Virginia's capital, and the lowest in the state. Today, he says, they are the highest in the state and 25% higher than in Richmond, citing rate information from insurer Cigna Corp. Anthem, another health insurer, says its rates are 6% higher in Roanoke than in Richmond.
Mr. Lionberger, whose construction company has about 100 employees, says his health-care costs have risen 50% over the past three years, hampering his ability to compete with contractors from other parts of the state. "It's frustrating," he says.
While Carilion strengthened its power in the hospital market, Roanoke continued to be home to a community of independent doctors numbering in the hundreds.
In 2001, Dr. Murphy took the nonprofit hospital system's helm. Dr. Murphy, who has a medical degree from Harvard but doesn't practice medicine, says he was convinced that the cost and quality of care in Roanoke could be improved if doctors worked in a more centralized system. In June 2006, he announced a seven-year, $100 million plan to transform Carilion into a multispecialty clinic, like the Mayo Clinic.
Carilion began approaching private physician groups, offering to buy their practices and pay their salaries. Some accepted, but others balked. Some doctors who chose to remain independent say the number of patients referred to them by Carilion physicians plummeted. Carilion controls a large proportion of Roanoke's referrals because it employs a majority of doctors who make them, such as family practitioners, pediatricians and emergency physicians.
Joseph Alhadeff, an orthopedic surgeon who is a member of a private practice called Roanoke Orthopedic Center, says the number of joint replacements he performed dropped off sharply after he stopped getting such referrals from Carilion doctors, prompting him to plan to relocate to Pennsylvania. "I spent seven years building up a practice and watched it evaporate in six months," he says.
Carilion spokesman Eric Earnhart says the hospital system didn't engage "in any activity to reduce or divert" referrals from Dr. Alhadeff. Mr. Earnhart adds that Carilion continues to refer numerous cases to Roanoke Orthopedic Center.
Geoffrey Harter, an ear, nose and throat doctor at another Roanoke private practice, Jefferson Surgical Clinic, says Carilion-employed colleagues told him the hospital system asked them not to refer patients to doctors it didn't employ, calling such referrals "leakage." Keeping referrals within Carilion is lucrative for the hospital system because it ensures tests and procedures performed on patients take place at Carilion facilities.
Dr. Murphy says Carilion uses the term "leakage" in internal marketing discussions and that he would rather see its doctors refer patients to other Carilion doctors to optimize their care. But he says Carilion doesn't require its doctors to keep referrals in-house even though it would be legal to do so.
As tension between Carilion and Roanoke's independent doctors grew in 2006, a group of 200 doctors formed an organization called the Coalition for Responsible Healthcare to protest the Carilion Clinic plan. The group posted a petition on its Web site and put up billboards around Roanoke that read: "Carilion Clinic. Big Dream. Big Questions." The local newspaper, the Roanoke Times, covered the controversy in a series of articles written by its health-care reporter, Jeff Sturgeon.
A few months later, in March 2007, the Roanoke Times moved Mr. Sturgeon off the health-care beat after Carilion complained repeatedly about his coverage. Carilion says it communicated its displeasure to the paper's editors, but never asked that Mr. Sturgeon be reassigned. Carilion withdrew most of its advertising from the paper, but says it did that as part of a reallocation of its ad budget. "Any friction that exists between an organization like us and the media is entirely appropriate," Mr. Earnhart says. Mr. Sturgeon, who now covers transportation, declined requests for comment. Carole Tarrant, the Roanoke Times's editor, said: "We're covering Carilion like we always have and always will, and have no plans to change how we cover Carilion." She declined to elaborate.
A large part of the clinic conversion's costs have involved the construction of a new medical campus around Roanoke Memorial Hospital that began several years earlier.
The lead contractor building the site is Swedish construction giant Skanska. But one of the project's biggest beneficiaries has been J.M. Turner & Co., which is owned by Carilion board member Jay Turner. Carilion says it paid J.M. Turner a total of $14.9 million in direct contracting work from 2004 to 2007.
Dr. Murphy says Carilion's board authorized "arm's length work" with J.M. Turner, but adds that "a case could be made that we shouldn't award work to J.M. Turner to avoid the appearance of impropriety."
Carilion also paid Skanska, the lead contractor, a total of $120.8 million from 2003 to 2007. Some of that money flowed back to J.M. Turner as subcontracting work, according to Skanska and J.M. Turner. The companies and Carilion declined to say how much.
In an email, Mr. Turner said he recuses himself from all Carilion board decisions that involve his company. He added that his firm passed on much of the $14.9 million in direct contracting work it received from Carilion to other subcontractors.
Mr. Turner isn't the only Carilion board member with a financial stake in the new medical campus. Another board member, Warner Dalhouse, has invested in a hotel being built on the campus to accommodate patients and their families. HomeTown Bank, a local bank Mr. Dalhouse founded and of which he was until recently chairman, is financing the hotel's construction. Dr. Murphy and Mr. Turner sit on HomeTown Bank's board.
Carilion and Mr. Dalhouse say he didn't make his $130,000 investment in the hotel until after Carilion sold the parcel to Texas developers in early 2006. "I wasn't dealing with Carilion. I was dealing with the new owners of that land who had paid fair market value for it," Mr. Dalhouse says.
Carilion says its transformation into a multispecialty clinic will eventually lower local health-care costs. But many patients say they have yet to see relief from Carilion medical bills.
Carilion awarded J.M. Turner & Co., which is owned and run by Carilion board member Jay Turner, at least $14.9 million in construction work.
The Roanoke City General District Court devotes one morning a week to cases filed by Carilion. In its fiscal year ended Sept. 30, Carilion says it sued 9,888 patients, garnished the wages of 5,478 people and placed liens on 3,920 homes. Carilion says the people it takes to court have the means to pay their bills.
On a Thursday morning in June, a Carilion representative waited outside a courtroom to intercept the half-dozen patients who had responded to summonses to appear in court. She took them to a side room to work out payment plans. A judge later called out names of close to 100 patients who didn't show and, one-by-one, entered judgments against them.
One of the patients who came to court, a 32-year-old housewife named Christie Masellis, faced a $12,137.12 bill. She had gastric bypass surgery at a Carilion facility in 2005. After developing complications, she required two more surgeries. She says her insurer covered the first surgery but not the two follow-ups because it changed its coverage policy.
Mrs. Masellis has two children. Her husband, Mark, earns about $49,000 a year working for an auto-parts distributor. Mrs. Masellis says she inquired about qualifying for hospital financial assistance, but the Carilion representative told her she was no longer eligible for charity care because her account was past due. The representative agreed to put her account on hold until Sept. 30 but offered her no discount. The bill included $2,514.82 in interest charges Carilion added to the original debt of $9,622.30.
Carilion's Mr. Earnhart says Mrs. Masellis had already received more than $15,000 in charity-care discounts. The suit Carilion filed is "for the remainder of the bill," he says.
Mr. and Mrs. Masellis have begun the process of filing for personal bankruptcy. Mr. Masellis says the hospital bill was a big factor in the decision, though the couple has other debts, including a $68,000 mortgage.
When some patients don't pay their bills, Carilion places liens on their homes. Carilion says it doesn't track how many liens it has outstanding, but the close to 4,000 it filed in 2007 "is representative of a typical year," Mr. Earnhart says. Carilion doesn't foreclose on homes and only collects when properties are sold, he says.
Dr. Murphy says Carilion only sues patients and places liens on their homes if it believes they have the ability to pay. "If you're asking me if it's right in a right-and-wrong sense, it's not," he says. But Carilion can't be blamed for the country's "broken" health-care system, he says.
How about the compensation packages for all the Lifepoint administration? Whatever little ol Danville CEO gets is peanuts compared to what is passed on to the higher ups in Brentwood.
Excellent point! Let’s look at the data for 2008.
Anyone who has interest can get financial data from the internet for both a publically traded company like Lifepoint and for a non-profit like Centra.
If you do, you will find that Lifepoint had $2.7 billion in revenues in 2008, and paid their CEO, Bill Carpenter, a total compensation package of $4,222,179 for running their 48 hospitals. Centra had revenues of $ 500,558,156 from their 2 hospitals and paid their CEO, George Dawson, a total of $1,622,198.
So, Mr. Carpenter was paid 0.156% of revenues or $87,962 per hospital in the Lifepoint system. Mr. Dawson was rewarded 0.274% of Centra’s revenues or $811,099 per hospital. I doubt that the compensation for the local DRMC CEO made up that difference of $723,137.
So this is the point: the compensation of executives does not account for the differences between for-profit hospitals and non-profits. It is disturbing to a lot of people that these non-profits make tons of money and don’t pay taxes even on the investment income from all the money they stash away in the bank. So, what do they do with it? They build opulent facilities and pay their executives huge and excessive salaries for the amount of work they do. In fact, the more money these non-profits make, the higher the compensation of their CEOs (hey – that’s just like a money-grubbing, greedy for-profit corporation!).
So, makes me really question why Centra wants to build a facility in Danville. It’s not because they want to help the local doctors or provide better care here. They simply want to make more (tax-free) money.
I want better healthcare in Danville, too. I know that Lifepoint sure hasn’t delivered. But, sadly, Centra ain’t the answer, either.
So the For profit CEO made 4 times what the noprofit CEO did hmmmmm sounds greedier to me...And lets not forget that is greed of CEOs
CEOs are allowed to do such things that would put you or I in prison...
Another great point! People distorting facts to support their own bias. Huge problem around here in Danville.
Let me put it in simple terms. If you go to Centra for an operation that costs $1000, then $2.74 of your money goes into the Centra CEO's pocket. If you have that operation at a Lifepoint hospital, only $1.56 goes to the CEO.
People on this blog have tried to be critical of for-profit hospitals, claiming that the amount of money that their executives make is more than that of non-profits like Centra, or that "no not for profit could ever waste that much money on nonhealthcare, nonproducing crud."
Clearly, neither claim is accurate.
And, remember, the surgery center that Centra wants to build here in Danville is a FOR-PROFIT JOINT VENTURE with Danville doctors.
So, is a non-profit hospital that engages in a for-profit venture different than a for-profit hospital? Or is Centra really a for-profit company (at least for its executives!) hiding behind its tax-exempt status?
"CEOs are allowed to do such things that would put you or I in prison..."
Like what for instance?
I don't think you can be put in jail just for being stupid or using poor grammar.
But lord-a-mighty if you could, there's a ton of posters on this blog that would have to be posting bail! LOL
"Like what for instance?"
How about watch the world news and see how many CEOs are getting busted for greed and theft. Then grow a brain
"I don't think you can be put in jail just for being stupid or using poor grammar"
First of all, you obviously know nothing about grammar, and at least one of the posts saying the Centra/Carillion CEOs netted more than the lifepoint O's is math ignorance at it's best.
I suspect at least one of those posts was by lifepoint.
Nope. Doesn't appear that I'm the ignorant one here.
Let's look at what you said:
"CEOs are allowed to do such things that would put you or I in prison."
When I asked for an example, you replied:
"How about watch the world news and see how many CEOs are getting busted for greed and theft."
There you have it. The CEOs weren't "allowed to do things",
but instead, as you said, they were "busted" for the illegal acts they committed. Just like you and I would be.
And math doesn't appear to be your strong suite, either. You claimed "The For profit CEO made 4 times what the no(n)profit CEO." However, $4,222,179 is only 2.6 times larger than $1,622,198, not 4 times larger.
And, the Lifepoint CEO is only paid 2.6 times as much as the non-profit CEO eventhough his company generates 5.4 times more revenue than Centra does.
By Centra's standards, it appears that the Lifepoint CEO is underpaid....
Oh well, I guess he'll just have to suck it up and make ends meet on the 4 mil a year he pulls down.
And one last thing while I'm on a roll. The correct sentence is:
"CEOs are allowed to do such things that would put you or ME in prison."
not
"CEOs are allowed to do such things that would put you or I in prison."
"me" is the correct form of the personal pronoun when it is used as an object in a sentence.
Wow...by golly...a ray of insight and intelligence. Are you sure you're on the right blog? :)
It may be of great interest to the residents of Danville to know how many of the DRMC directors, managers, & staff have used Centra for healthcare needs for themselves and/or their families in the recent past, but yet, some of the same people are protesting the opportunity for the citizens of Danville to have Centra as a local choice.
LifePoint took over the local hospital...The Danville Memorial Hospital may have had problems/issues, what healthcare establishment doesn't! But it is very evident since LifePoint came in, problems and issues in care, staffing, & trust has multiplied 3 fold. Competition is good for communities. Centra is not taking the place of; but offering another choice in healthcare. You choose - but at least you have local choices!
I also know of one DRMC manager, specifically the manager of the OR, who brags that she no longer has "the sucky Lifepoint insurance and benefits" since her husband took a state job.
centra is not a local entity, please note. They are well settled in Lynchburg and they have their problems too locally. If competition is good, would they allow another medical facility ot come there??? NO!!!!!!!!
Minor problems and complaints are with any organization and the hospital care has been improved, thanks to community concerns.
Centra won't be an answer, it will only add to their administrators make more money, probably CEO and VP of Centra may go up to 2million and 1 million salary if they do it for Lynchburg, not Danville!!!!!!
So, does it really make any difference if we here in Danville are taken advantage of by greedy Lifepoint or by greedy Centra?
I'm not sure which option is the lesser of the two evils.
Neither organization cares about the people of Danville, only about getting us to part with our money.
"You claimed "The For profit CEO made 4 times what the no(n)profit CEO."
First off, YOU made the claims.
Second, I generalized.
Third I was there to see the services deteriorate immediately after lifepoint took control.
4th my math skills are WAY above yours, I just don't have time to sit and nit-pick. Again generalizations.
And lastly, read the part in the news paper about lifepoint whining that they won't get the money that they were getting because all of the paying customers will go to Centra (whaaaa)News flash provide decent care and do it fairly and you might get customers, oh wait, Carillion has 3 ERs with virtually NO wait times, hmmm I suspect Centras is close to that, oh wait , they are BOTH non-profits, hmmm, could it be that they don't have the massive salary base and shareholders that lifepoint or any FOR profit has ....and since danville CANNOT support millionaires salaries , well except for the 5 idiots...well ...
Fascinating fact is that Lifepoint stock hasn't increased in value in the past ten years, and the company has never declared a dividend and never paid their shareholders a red cent.
Which, frankly, has some of the shareholders pretty hacked off.
yet lifepoint claims they do pay good dividends.....hmmm
Well let's see....in 2000, the stock price was trading anywhere from 10 to 18 per share. No publicly traded hospital companies have paid a dividend expcept HMA and that was to load the company down with debt to avoid being taken private. Next brilliant obeservation?
Ask the CxOs at the hospital, it's not an observation.It's fact...or at least what they say us fact...
No neeed to ask anyone. Just pull them up on your stock board of choice. Compare LPNT, HMA, CHS, etc.
The post above was factual.
Lies, damned lies and investment advice...
In 2000, LPNT traded at the beginning of the year as low as $12.50 but ended the year at its high of $51.12 on December 27th.
LPNT has never paid a dividend (but many companies don't).
LPNT closed at $34.05 on Friday, May 7, 2010. On September 25th, 2000 LPNT closed at $34.44, crossing the $34/share level for the first time.
So, if you bought LPNT stock before September 25, 2000, you have made money. Unless you timed the market right, if you purchased the stock since then, you haven't made much and may well have lost money.
Community Health went from $32.12 to $38.19 during the same time frame.
However, lest we be accused of disparaging Lifepoint unfairly, over the same period of time, Tenet and HMA have tanked.
So, I stick to my position that LPNT has not generated much value for its shareholders unless you bought the stock when the company was very new, because all of the gains were in the first couple of years. Yeah, maybe the correct interval is more like 9.5 years, not ten years. My bad.
The stock has performed poorly since Scott Mercy and Jim Fleetwood died.
Report recommends no Centra surgical center in Danville
Published: May 21, 2010
The Virginia Division of Certificate of Public Need’s staff report recommended that the state health commissioner deny Centra’s request for a Certificate of Public Need to build an outpatient surgery center in Danville.
The process to evaluate Centra’s request will continue to an informal fact-finding conference scheduled for June 8, said Erik Bodin, director of the Division of COPN.
The state staff, the applicant and other parties will make their cases to an administrative law judge at the hearing.
The judge will then make another recommendation to the state health commissioner, who is expected to make a decision by mid-September
CONGRATULATIONS LIFEPOINT YOU SCREWED US AGAIN !!!!!!
GOODBYE DANVILLE !!!!
If Centra is so much better than Lifepoint, how come they weren't smart enough to convince the Virginia Division of Certificate of Public Need’s staff that it was in the public's best interest for Centra to build a surgery center in Danville?
Personally, I don't believe Centra ever really had any intention of building the surgery center. They are just using this as a ploy to drive an even bigger wedge between DRMC and the local populus. What Centra REALLY wants is for people to drive up to Lynchburg and use the facilities and doctors they already own.
I'm sure that one of the top 50 safest hospitals which is also one of the top 100 heart hospitals is smart enough. Danville was most likely and as usual bought off.
As far as a wedge, thats been done in spades by lifepoint and the fab 5.
The majority of the populace is already driving to Duke, Cone, Annie Penn, Eden, Roxboro, UNC Chapel Hill,South Boston, Wake Forest anyway so .........
Build it and we will come. If they don't build it we will go. To Lynchburg that is! No one I know that DRMC in the last six months has had anything good to say about the hospital. Most will not go back. Changing people will not fix poor management. I will not go to a hospital that I don't think will take good care of me. Just like I will not return to a restaurant that the food and or serivce was bad.
GET OVER IT!!! Some of you people have been holding a grudge for 5 YEARS!! It it not exhausting to you? You continuously talk about "the boys at the bank"...there were local physicians on the board who had a hand in selling the hospital to LifePoint. You so conveniently leave these people out when you dish out your slanderous comments. Get a life. If you don't want to support DRMC then that is your choice. I for one will continue to support DRMC. I have experienced nothing but professional and caring attention in my past dealings with DRMC.
"I have experienced nothing but professional and caring attention in my past dealings with DRMC"
You're either ignorant or lucky.
I'll hope lucky.
Believe it or not, some people have had excellent experiences as patients at DRMC. Good care and excellent otucomes.
It is happening a lot more often than it used to, and a lot more often than many of you want to admit.
Still a lot of really big problems and a lot of work yet to be done, but real progress.
“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly; who errs and comes short again and again; because there is not effort without error and shortcomings; but who does actually strive to do the deed; who knows the great enthusiasm, the great devotion, who spends himself in a worthy cause, who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement and who at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly. So that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat.”
"Still a lot of really big problems and a lot of work yet to be done, but real progress."
Progress just to get back to the level that it was before this mess is NOT real progress...just the acceptance of substandard performance.
Perhaps Centra should have shuttled all of their employees over to the hearing??? Lifepoint has not changed, the people still will not come to their facility. DRMC will never recover the community trust under Lifepoint management, no matter what LPNT does or says. The public and many, many DRMC employees will continue to go out of town to meet their healthcare needs. I feel sorry for Eric Deaton personally-I hope he kept his suitcase packed.
I know how Lifepoint operates and treats staff, physicians, and customers. The number of employees who spoke out in favor of DRMC and so passionately identified it as "our hospital" is surprising considering Lifepoint's poor regard for their human resources. Intimidation truly can work wonders when one is rallying support for a cause such as eliminating the threat of competition.
It was a pathetic plea to the State and to the community asking people to give LPNT a second chance.... They have got to be kidding!!!! This would be more like the higher end of a scale of 1-10 on chances. Again now, how many CEO'S have we gone through? Come on now, people!!! If Centra wants in, it will only be a matter of time. LPNT is no match for Centra when it comes to quality healthcare and anybody who questions that probably needs to do a little research. Numbers do not lie, especially national ones.....
30 people (20 of which are on DRMC payroll & 10 other DRMC affiliates - physicians, various board members, volunteer chaplains & professional affiliates) all spoke in opposition on May 7. Centra had 16 supporters (average citizens and 1 Danville surgeon)from the community and surrounding service areas there to speak in favor of Centra's plans, none of which were on Centra's payroll. One undecided who felt DRMC just needed more staff. It is amazing that Centra did not have to pay these people to speak for them and rather ironic that DRMC had no "average citizens" speaking in support of their hospital, just employees and affiliates, isn't it? That is not a perception but reality. DRMC would probably not have had the clergy support they had, had we not had the foresight to gather all of them together to bond a couple of weeks prior to the hearing, wasn't that a coincidence??? Brilliant strategy, Brentwood!!!
Brilliant strategy, Lynchburg!! Centra is an outsider, not your own and find out how many problems they have locally including lega like any other place. People still go out anywhere they want to, even Lynchburg population go to UVA or other places, surprized!! There are just a few people never stop negative postings no matter how hard someone works. Does centra have gold seal from JCAHO? DRMC being a bigger hospital has a much busy ER and diagnostic tools compared to places like Eden, Reidsville etc where they dont have much population, diagnostic services and can see patients may be bit quicker with smaller problems. Go and see the DRMC ER how they strive to work hard, nobody wants a bad outcome for anyone. Please ask yourself if you were perfect with your life and work,and, of course Centra, the name of perfection...ha ha ha. please get on with lives and let DRMC make progress better than Centra, thanks to all those critics!
2000, 2003, 2005, and 2006 Solucient 100 Top Cardiovascular Hospital. DaVinci,only 80 beds difference in the one hospital on paper,specializing in cardiology, emergency medicine, orthopedics, neurology, and neurosurgery.Hmmmmm, where did they get a neuro surgeon hmmm, OH yeah , SHE LEFT Danville because of lifepoint!
LGH is recognized nationally for its orthopedic and cardiac programs.Stroobants Heart Center.
lifepoint is only nationally recognized for bullying small areas and ruining hospitals.
Oh and Centra sees more ER patients faster than DRMC, look it up.
"go to UVA " duuh, It's A TEACHING HOSPITAL They do things there that aren't done anywhere else in the state!!
Not negative just living in the real world.... Thanks but no thanks for the invite and the Kool-Aid. I have been in your DRMC ER and seen it firsthand from the inside, not impressed. Not too sure how busy it is these days, not very from what I understand. A lot of Medicaid, elderly & a few emergencies tossed in occasionally.
Centra is hardly an outsider, a neighboring facility a lot closer by than Brentwood, TN. Do the math. And you have got to be kidding about the little gold seal thingy, how much did that cost???
Centra is one of the TOP 100 hospitals in America. You don't get in the top 100 without doing your homework and providing quality healthcare. Danville is fortunate Centra has stepped up to the plate and is ready, willing, and more than able to meet Danville's healthcare needs. And they don't have a boxing ring in their cath lab, or temper tantrums imagine that!!!!
There are far too many options in healthcare today to have to "settle" for substandard care.
Much to Lifepoint's dismay, Centra will get their CON. You don't get in the top 100 with a bunch of pansies doing the driving, either. They know how to take care of business and the public in Danville and the region as a whole have welcomed them in. Hospital employees hardly make up the whole public in Danville. Keep in mind, one of the most prominent attorneys in Danville recently wrote a letter of support to the Editor encouraging others to do the same. This man is a very educated and highly respected man, he has practiced law in Danville over 50 years, probably represented most families in Danville in some way or another over the years, has family & roots in Danville, and one son who is a doctor (Specialist) who is NO LONGER practicing in Danville. His support speaks volumes in the community, his letter probably created several hundred more letters of support to the State for Centra. I might add this attorney is also the former Mayor of Danville and a councilman for several terms on City Council. I would never underestimate the influence he has on the community.
Bring the perfection on, Centra! You can't get here soon enough!!!
"Does centra have gold seal from JCAHO?"
Do your homework before you start a fight...
Centra exceeds lifepoint in EVERY category..
http://www.qualitycheck.org/consumer/searchresults.aspx?nm=centra+health&ddstatelist=VA&st_nm=VIRGINIA&st=VA
Above from the Joint Comm. site.
It suffices to say that Centra is a well-run organization with intelligent and thoughtful leadership. For certain, that leadership anticipated the COPN committee's unfavorable recommendation and has an alternative strategy in place. I don't know what that stratgy is nor am I sure what this whole thing is going to look like when it's finally over, but my money is on Centra.
Centra is just much better at what they do than Lifepoint is.
"I have experienced nothing but professional and caring attention in my past dealings with DRMC"
WHAT PLANET ARE YOU ON???? My last experience was horrific. The ER was OK, but once admitted I saw how bad things were. Not enough nurses, a staff that could care less, doctors who don't want to be there, and some terrible incompetence. Wake up people....we need a local hospital and DRMC does not act like one.
"we need a local hospital and DRMC does not act like one"
That's because it ceased being a local hospital when the 5 old geezers sold it for play money.
The comments here on the blog and in the paper are amusing. We were screwed by the sale of DRMC. Good people were let go from the beginning by the administration already in place that took an opportunity to get revenge and prove to Lifepoint that they could make DRMC look extremely profitable. Assets were taken to other facilities, budgets froze and staffing reduced dramatically without a plan to compensate for the losses. All those people have since left. Key people that took care of the little things in the background were either let go, resigned or moved elsewhere. This set up the failures JCAHO found because no one knew the little things in the background were not being done. DRMC was forced into the Lifepoint mold rather than anyone taking the time to see what DRMC was and what the strides it was making. Unfortunately, there were many processes that did not fit well in the new mold. No one really tried to reconcile them. The ones who did were “troublemakers” and meet resistance from the staff who did not want to change and from Administration who was looking for praise from Brentwood. Staff were not held accountable at the level they should have been and the less desirable ones stayed because they could not get away with their behavior elsewhere and good ones left to provide quality care elsewhere and to be appreciated for their work. And let’s not forget the doctors. Communication to come to an agreement over policies, staffing, supplies and compensation was a joke. Many of the issues were valid. Doctors lead the care of the patient. Their diagnostic determinations and treatment plans lead patient care. Their decisions bring the nurses and other staff into the picture. Now there are A LOT of prima donnas who want what they want-no exceptions! And there are several doctors whose diagnostic and/or surgical skills are mediocre at best (not all physicians are at the top of their class…do the places that recruit ask about class rank?? This is not a Lifepoint-caused problem. There are mediocre doctors everywhere. I have met a few.). Meanwhile Administration was too engrossed looking at productivity tables and costs. The doctors revolted.
So DRMC went down the tubes. Now Centra is here to save us all. Perhaps. I see both sides. DRMC has not provided the quality care that they are capable of. Even pre-Lifepoint there have been issues. ER waits have always been lllooooonnnnnggggg! Will the new guy be the force of change DRMC needs? Who knows and Danville is tired of waiting!!! The new Centra facility will be another PrimeCare facility with an X-ray department and a couple of operating suites. Not a full hospital. If a surgery patient needs overnight observation, do they stay there or transferred to Lynchburg or even DRMC? If a surgery goes bad and the patient needs care beyond the capabilities of the facility, will they be transferred to Lynchburg or DRMC? If it’s DRMC and the patient dies, I guess DMRC takes the blame?? It is interesting that area doctors are making financial investments in the facility. Can that be done with a non-profit facility??? Some patients now take a chance and come to DRMC so they do not have to travel out of town, but with Centra they will have a choice to stay in town. If DRMC loses this revenue as patients flock to the Centra facility, services will eventually have be cut and not all of those unemployed will find a job at this new facility. So their options will be moving (loss of their families’ buying power in the community), commuting to work out of town (and spending a bigger portion of their earnings out of town) or competing with the other unemployed in Danville for the few jobs available.
Danville is at a crossroads. No matter the outcome someone will be unhappy!
FINALLY, an intelligent post. I will definitely agree that some our physicians are NOT at the top of their game. We have 2 Neurologists that are questionable, one of which I think of as totally incompetent. We have a Pulmonologisy that doesn't care about patients. We have lost a good Oncologist but fortunately still have a couple good ones here. We have lost a good Neurosurgeon and it will not get better until major changes happen.
OK OK so I can't spell....or is it a typo: Pulmonologist
Why is the Director of one department @ DRMC worried about staff members in another department when her own department staff doesn't follow the policies? Maybe it's time Management reviews the Employee Satisfaction Survey and takes action!
Why is the director of one department in DRMC worried about staff in another department when her own department staff are not following policies? Maybe the administration should review the Employee Satisfaction Survey and take actions to improve work environment, employee relations, and overall quality.
US surgery centers found to be lax on preventing infections
Failure to wash hands noted
By Carla K. Johnson, Associated Press
June 9, 2010
CHICAGO — A new federal study found that many same-day surgery centers — where patients get such things as foot operations and pain injections — have serious problems with infection control.
Failure to wash hands, wear gloves, and clean blood glucose meters were among the reported breaches. Clinics reused devices meant for one person or dipped into single-dose medicine vials for multiple patients.
The findings, appearing in today’s Journal of the American Medical Association, suggest lax infection practices could pervade the nation’s more than 5,000 outpatient centers, specialists said.
“These are basic fundamentals of infection control, things like cleaning your hands, cleaning surfaces in patient care areas,’’ said lead author Dr. Melissa Schaefer of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “It’s all surprising and somewhat disappointing.’’
The study was prompted by a hepatitis C outbreak in Las Vegas believed to be caused by unsafe injection practices at two now-closed clinics.
It was the first report from a push to more vigorously inspect US outpatient centers, a growing segment of the health care system that annually performs more than 6 million procedures and collects $3 billion from Medicare. Procedures performed included exams of the esophagus, colonoscopies, and plastic surgery.
State inspectors visited 68 centers in Maryland, North Carolina, and Oklahoma. At each site, inspectors followed at least one patient through an entire stay. Inspections were not announced ahead of time, but staff were notified once inspectors arrived.
The study found 67 percent of the centers had at least one lapse in infection control and 57 percent were cited for deficiencies. The study did not look at whether the lapses led to infections in patients.
“These people knew they were under observation, had the opportunity to be on their best behavior, and yet these lapses were still identified, some of which potentially are very dangerous and have been warned against explicitly,’’ said Dr. Philip Barie of Weill Cornell Medical College in New York.
Barie was not involved in the study but wrote an accompanying editorial in the journal.
Guess what , hospitals do mostly outpatient also, infection rates are actually as high or higher from the rampant VRE MRSA and ESBL present in most hospitals ...
Nice try lifepoint stooge...
As a LP employee I can say....PLEASE take your family members else where. Nursing ratios on the surgical floor is 7 patients to 1 nurse. NOT SAFE!!! I am currently looking for something else. I have stood behind LP for 3 years too many, now I fear losing a nursing lisence I worked so hard for.
With Sue there now...the troll that was sent to clean the place up....all of management is ready to crap in their pants in fear of the axe! They do not stand behind nurses for what is right.
Nurses that aren't afraid to stand up for what is right and what is safe for patients are being repremended and "let go"!! REALLY?! Can we afford to lose many more nurses due to the lack of knowledge and balls of directors and management?
Recently nurses have been told to chemically restrain elderly patients, by supervisors, to keep the patients from being aggitated. OR BETTER YET....to "find a reason" for wrist restraints!!! The reason being..."we don't have staff to sit with the patients".
Yes, this is what our parents and grandparents are being put through at DRMC! FACT NOT FICTION!!!
Dr.Bird is gone....that leaves 3 general surgeons. The ortho group is operating at Annie Penn. ENT goes to Morehead. Dr.Akers will be gone after December. Open your eyes Danville!!! The OR here is dying!!!!
Oh, and Donna Bodman really needs to evaluate her own staff for policy compliance. I would think that face piercings would rank up there with the tattoos you have been pointing out on other floors!!! Really, just because you looked like an ass that day and you were wrong but couldn't admit it, your actions by what you did to the charge nurse showed what a rediculously retarted bitch you are. Something your staff has known for years now!
As a LP employee I can say....PLEASE take your family members else where. Nursing ratios on the surgical floor is 7 patients to 1 nurse. NOT SAFE!!! I am currently looking for something else. I have stood behind LP for 3 years too many, now I fear losing a nursing lisence I worked so hard for.
With Sue there now...the troll that was sent to clean the place up....all of management is ready to crap in their pants in fear of the axe! They do not stand behind nurses for what is right.
Nurses that aren't afraid to stand up for what is right and what is safe for patients are being repremended and "let go"!! REALLY?! Can we afford to lose many more nurses due to the lack of knowledge and balls of directors and management?
Recently nurses have been told to chemically restrain elderly patients, by supervisors, to keep the patients from being aggitated. OR BETTER YET....to "find a reason" for wrist restraints!!! The reason being..."we don't have staff to sit with the patients".
Yes, this is what our parents and grandparents are being put through at DRMC! FACT NOT FICTION!!!
Dr.Bird is gone....that leaves 3 general surgeons. The ortho group is operating at Annie Penn. ENT goes to Morehead. Dr.Akers will be gone after December. Open your eyes Danville!!! The OR here is dying!!!!
Oh, and Donna Bodman really needs to evaluate her own staff for policy compliance. I would think that face piercings would rank up there with the tattoos you have been pointing out on other floors!!! Really, just because you looked like an ass that day and you were wrong but couldn't admit it, your actions by what you did to the charge nurse showed what a rediculously retarted bitch you are. Something your staff has known for years now!
Hopefully the employee satisfaction surveys will be looked at by corp.
The last poster has said NOTHING new that hasn't been said for the past several years by others in the know.
NURSING LEADERSHIP of the Nursing Units is where THE problem lies.For 2a/a there is the illustrious Martha Hopkins once 'removed" from her leadership position for "misrepresenting" (aka lying) about her "time at work"...ok,falsifying her hours paid/worked. She was asked back and has never made an impact in improving a damn thing. Ask her peers what they think "off the record".
And Donna Bodman of the OR....OMG what a fruitcake. talk to her for 15 minutes about operations and you'll see she is LOST.
Marsha Jamison,over a number of units is swamped,lost and has no vision because she has never had a mentor who had a vision or a grasp on operations. And she admits she doesn't want all the responsibility but understands she "isn't allowed to say no" to administration.
And the ER ......well it has had 14 directors in 15 years.GO FIGURE.
WELL.....from what I hear, certain areas (OR) have time for horse play instead of managing time wisely. If, lets say, attendance and time clock punches were being looked at instead of acting a fool with the CRNA's then people wouldn't be wearing orthopedic boots to work today!!! Just out of curiosity...can those be removed for play time at the pool on Westend Estates?!
The public has no clue what hospital staff see, report, and have to live with every day. Unfortunately once you do report something in an effort to ensure patient safety or if you see a HIPPA violation, you will be ran out or pushed out ESPECIALLY if Donna Bodman and Cindy Smith are the ones who are trying to cover up thier guilt.....I worked at the hospital for 15 years...It is not safe
12,000 Minnesota Nurses Stage One-Day Strike
Outside Abbott Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis, what was called the largest nurses strike in U.S. history began Thursday to the sounds of "Amazing Grace" played on Michael Redmond's bagpipe.
The 50-year-old nurse, wearing a red Minnesota Nurses Association T-shirt and green plaid kilt, said he picked the song because of its history as an old abolitionist rallying cry. He played as night-shift nurses walked off the job early Thursday.
He said he sees a connection between the old fight against slavery and the strike by 12,000 Minnesota nurses. "The rally cry is that we're standing up for patient care and we're standing up for ourselves," he said.
A key issue in the dispute was the nurses' demand for strict nurse-to-patient ratios, rejected by hospitals as inflexible and unnecessary. Sue Stamness, a cardiology nurse at Abbott for 24 years, said patient safety was the nurses' top concern.
"Nobody is listening to what we are saying," Stamness said.
The nurses began their one-day strike at 7 a.m. at 14 hospitals in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area. Organizers said nurses would walk picket lines in three eight-hour shifts and by the end of the day nearly all 12,000 would participate.
Though called the largest nurses strike in U.S. history by both the union and the hospitals, the immediate effect was expected to be minimal.
In the cardiovascular intensive care unit at Abbott early Thursday, nurse Bridget Parks said extra doctors were around to reinforce the replacement nurses. A lot of them. "It is amazing how many physicians they thought it took to replace the nurses," she said.
Like other businesses, hospitals are trying to trim their budgets even as health care costs have been skyrocketing. Nurse pay and benefits are among the hospitals' largest expenses. Nurses oppose proposed pension cuts and complain that staffing levels have reached dangerous levels, making their jobs ever more stressful.
Patients are older and tend to be sicker, with multiple chronic conditions. Also, advancing medical technology is putting new demands on nurses, said Karen Higgins, a Massachusetts nurse and one of three presidents of National Nurses United, a national union of 155,000 nurses that was formed when three regional unions joined six months ago. The Minnesota Nurses Association is affiliated with it.
"They've had enough," she said. "It's time to say that we're going to do what we have to do to protect our patients."
The hospitals say the nurses' proposals would cost them millions, and Schriner said the union's argument that patients are suffering just isn't true.
"The fact is that patients receive excellent quality of care in our hospitals. And for the union to be [saying] it wants to improve patient safety, then it should be proposing more flexibility and not putting in more rigid rules," she said.
Ripple Effect
Minnesota isn't the only state with labor unrest at its hospitals. Thousands of nurses in California were also poised to strike Thursday before a judge blocked that plan. A series of rallies were scheduled instead.
Gary Chaison, a professor of labor relations at Clark University in Worcester, Mass., predicted a ripple across the country.
"I think one strike will lead to another and another and another and we'll have a huge national upheaval of nurses because they feel they've been left out of the decision-making at health care institutions," he said.
But Chaison said the striking nurses have do have one advantage: "Everyone likes nurses. It's very seldom that someone leaves a hospital and says, 'What wonderful administrators they have at the hospital.' But they do leave the hospital and say what wonderful nurses they were," he said. "And I think people will recognize that when nurses walk a picket line, they must have a serious problem."
Everyone likes nurses. It's very seldom that someone leaves a hospital and says, 'What wonderful administrators they have at the hospital.' But they do leave the hospital and say what wonderful nurses they were," he said. "And I think people will recognize that when nurses walk a picket line, they must have a serious problem."
Is this a preview of what is to come in Danville? Is this what it's going to take to wake up Lifepoint leadership in Brentwood that it can't be "business as usual" in Danville anymore?
"American National Bank and Trust Company named Jeffrey V. Haley as president of the bank and as a member of the bank’s board of directors." from Danville Register and Bee.
So, I wonder what community built and paid for property he'll get to sell for play money...?
Oh please... Jeff Haley had nothing to do with the sale of DRMC. Don't hang that yoke around his neck.
Amen to the posts about the OR management and horseplay!! Good thing the injured manager has good insurance and not that Lifepoint insurance that sucks!!
That being said, she was once demoted from her management position because of her lack of management skills. She manages with intimidation and fear tactics. However, she was promptly reinstated when Lifepoint took over DRMC!! What does she have over administration? Despite multiple complaints, she always comes out smelling like a rose. Only those who work under her truly know her true side!!!!
"Don't hang that yoke around his neck."
Boy, you're a dunce, the post is obviously refering to the culture of ANB not the individual....
Did anyone see the AORN Connections article that was mailed out this week? It specifically addresses the inappropriate practice of washing OR scrubs at home and wearing them outside of the hospital. This very practice was implemented 10 years ago at DRMC and has been continuously defended by infection control and OR management. This despite evidence based practice suggested by a reputable, national organization (AORN). But as always, DRMC knows more than anyone else, even AORN. All to the tune of "saving $20,000 a year." What happened to putting the patient and community needs first? What happened to protecting patients and the community from exposure to unnecessary contaminants?
Where did this wash scrubs at home crap come from? DRMC has always had scrubs for use in the OR... As for the smokers going outside in scrubs ,now that has to stop...tell them to use "the patch" or stop paying any part of their health insurance if they continue to smoke. Also if you want to be technical about it, as soon as you leave the OR and go to ,say, the cafeteria the scrubs are contaminated. After you touch a patient in the OR the scrubs are contaminated, the RNs and MDs actually in the surgical field are covered in impervious gowns so, to an extent the arguement could go on uselessly forever. Want the OR staff to change scrubs after each case, I don't see that happening that's what the impervious gowns are for. The misconception that most people have is that the OR is sterile, it's not, it's clean. That's it, IBMs computer "chip room" is 1000 times cleaner than an OR so.....
The above poster obviously has NO idea what goes on in the OR. Scrubs are provided by DRMC and are in the locker rooms for visitors and physicians only. OR employees are required to buy their own scrubs and wash them at home. This has been the practice since January 2000. Also....above poster must also think their knowledge is above the nationally recognized, reputable Association of Operating Room Nurses whose standards are evidence based.
If Mr. Deaton wants the OR to have 15 minute turnovers between their 6cases each day, perhaps the manager could help with the turnover rather than horseplaying resulting in her injury!!
Yep - AORN recommends that scrubs be laundered in certified facilities. With home laundering, no one uses the type of harsh detergents that are necessary to insure that bacteria and spores are destroyed. Not to mention mch of the colorful and "fashionable" scrub attire that staff purchase for their own use wouldn't hold up to that kind of repeated washing.
Several years ago, this information was not available, so it was very much in vogue to allow staff to home launder their O.R. attire. A huge plus was that it is much cheaper for the hospital, who saves on lost scrubs as well as the cost of laundering.
BEST practice would be to REQUIRE staff to wear hospital-laundered attire in the O.R., not simply give them the option of doing it.
Doubt DRMC will make this move because of the cost.
"If Mr. Deaton wants the OR to have 15 minute turnovers between their 6cases each day, perhaps the manager could help with the turnover rather than horseplaying resulting in her injury!!"
You can bet the new Centra Danville Surgery Center will have 15 minute turnover. In large part because they will bring their own O.R. staff and management down from Lynchburg.
A couple of years ago, two of the cardiac O.R. nurses from DRMC came up to Lynchburg General to work.
They only lasted two months....
"You can bet the new Centra Danville Surgery Center will have 15 minute turnover. In large part because they will bring their own O.R. staff and management down from Lynchburg."
You're exactly right. Trying to hire from Danville and expecting great operations/outcomes would be pretty foolish.
"for visitors and physicians only"---100% FALSE
Nope, the O.R. crew at DRMC is very inbred, unprofessional, relatively inexperienced and highly unmotivated.
How could anyone working for lifepoint be motivated ? It is a greedy PATHETIC excuse for a hospital. I had a family member recently go to the ER 2 times for the same type situation. 1st time DRMC- The head hospitalist (who was on for the day) didn't bother to show up until the NEXT DAY (this was a 8 AM ER visit) costing an admission charge for a very simple situation. NONE of the hospitalist showed up and that was the reason for the admission.
Same situation a week or so ago - driven to Annie Penn. Took 24 minutes to get there, into ER room in 12 minutes, treated, reassessed discharged and home 4 hours 20 minutes....Enough said!!! NO MORE TRIPS TO DRMC !!!!
Fact: a good ER nurse was fired yesterday for "not following policy" but a DRMC manager that violates HIPAA regulations and does not follow policy is still on the job!
things that make you go "ummm?"
This dismissal was a long time coming. A surprise to some I'm sure but not the first of many such "errors in judgement".
Sounds like they really weren't a "good ER nurse." We use that excuse all the time. They'r e areally good nurse (clinically) just a really crappy attitude. Then we think its ok for them to stay no matter how disruptive they are. Second verse, same as the first, LPNT or no LPNT. We let them stay before LPNT got here.
DRMC names new chief nursing officer
Danville Register & Bee
July 3, 2010
Suzanne “Sue” Milas will serve as Danville Regional Medical Center’s chief nursing officer, DRMC leaders announced.
Milas has served as the interim CNO since early May, according to a DRMC news release.
As chief nursing officer, Milas will have the ultimate administrative responsibility for all nursing standards, practice, policies and procedures at the hospital. Her expertise extends to patient-focused quality care, program development, clinical operations and accreditation development and preparation, among others, according to the release.
“I have thoroughly enjoyed my time so far at Danville Regional and I am looking forward to working closer with our dedicated and highly skilled nurses, as well as getting involved in the community,” said Milas. “We have a great team focused on providing great care to our patients.”
Milas brings more than 25 years of health care experience to her role. Most recently, Milas served as the interim vice president of clinical operations for St. Catherine Regional Hospital in Charlestown, Ind.
“Sue has demonstrated that she has the proven experience and leadership necessary to serve as chief nursing officer,” said CEO Eric Deaton of Danville Regional. “We are happy to welcome her as a permanent member of the Danville Regional family.”
She is an advanced registered nurse practitioner and she served in several executive leadership roles, including: chief operating officer/chief nursing officer for Duke Memorial Hospital in Peru, Ind., vice president for patient care at Parkway Regional Medical Center in Atlanta, Ga., and as the vice president for patient care at Pocono Health System in East Stroudsburg, Pa.
Milas received a Master of Business Administration from Kennesaw State University, a Master of Science in nursing from the University of South Florida and a Bachelor of Science in nursing from the University of Florida. She is affiliated with several professional organizations, including the American College of Health Care Executives and the National Association of Female Executives.
In addition to her other leadership titles, she has inherited another..."CLEAN UP WOMAN".
She has a number of pieces of a broken nursing department to sweep up and few nursing "leaders" to mop up.
The remnants/failures of Becky Logan are in every nook and cranny of DRMC.It is discouraging some of them didn't leave along with her versus suffering what hopefully will come.
Maybe she should start in the OR....if the "boot" fits, wear it!!!!
When is "Big Bird" going to fix the call pay discrimination???!!!
http://www2.godanriver.com/gdr/news/opinion/community_voices/article/drmc_a_jobs_engine_for_region/22538/
DRMC a jobs engine for region
By Eric Deaton
As the CEO of Danville’s only acute care, full-service hospital, my goal is to ensure access to affordable quality health care. Every day I walk the halls of the hospital, greeting patients, often grieving or concerned families, physicians, nurses and other medical and non-medical personnel, meeting people with the same hopes and goals as I have.
But in addition to our primary goal and mission, your community hospital also provides exceptional career opportunities, creates spin-off jobs and additional economic activity in a region that has been impacted by external economic conditions beyond the control of the community.
When I was named CEO of Danville Regional Medical Center, one of the first things I wanted to understand was how important the hospital is to the Dan River Region in terms of jobs and economic impact.
As a newcomer to Danville, but aware of the history of the area, and the importance of hospitals, I knew Danville Regional was the second largest private employer for the area. I also knew the Dan River Region had been hurt by significant job losses due to outsourcing and the decline of the tobacco economy.
But to understand the full scope of your hospital’s economic impact, I asked renowned state economist Christine Chmura of Richmond to analyze the impact of your hospital.
According to her report released just last week, Danville Regional represents more than 5 percent of the employment base for Danville with a total economic impact of $183 million in the Dan River Region in 2009.
Last year, Danville Regional provided jobs to nearly 1,500 people, including 1,229 from Danville and Pittsylvania County. While the area has lost over 7,400 jobs in the last decade, the importance of Danville Regional as an employer has increased. Your hospital currently represents 5.6 percent of the employment in the city.
In addition to the direct jobs of our outstanding professionals at the hospital, including medical and non-medical personnel, the hospital also created an additional 558 jobs in the region.
Since 2005, Danville Regional has invested over $32 million in capital improvements. The Chmura study indicated that the impacts of those capital improvements resulted in 358 Virginia jobs (246 of those in the Dan River Region) and more than $50 million in direct, indirect and induced spending in the area. That extra economic impact of almost $18 million is the hidden benefit of major capital improvements, creating additional jobs not directly related to the underlying projects.
Further, in 2009 alone, the city of Danville received $1.5 million in tax payments from Danville Regional. This includes property taxes and BPOL taxes paid to the city. An additional $3.4 million in state taxes, including income tax, sales tax and other payments, were generated for the commonwealth of Virginia.
I know from more than 20 years experience working with hospitals across the South that a strong local hospital is critical to economic development. It is rare that a major employer will come to a community that lacks adequate health care, and access to quality affordable health care. That is why it is so important to maintain your community hospital: it’s beyond the care that your family may find it needs, it’s about recruiting quality high-paying jobs to this area to help with the economic recovery that Southside Virginia so desperately needs.
I urge everyone in the region to work with me to help support Danville Regional not only as the area’s only acute care hospital, but also to support and promote the jobs created, directly and indirectly, by your hospital.
The study also indicated concern that the creation of an ambulatory surgery center just a few miles from Danville Regional would put negative competitive pressures on your hospital and our ability to create and maintain jobs.
(article truncated due to length)
http://www2.godanriver.com/gdr/news/opinion/community_voices/article/drmc_a_jobs_engine_for_region/22538/
DRMC a jobs engine for region
By Eric Deaton
As the CEO of Danville’s only acute care, full-service hospital, my goal is to ensure access to affordable quality health care. Every day I walk the halls of the hospital, greeting patients, often grieving or concerned families, physicians, nurses and other medical and non-medical personnel, meeting people with the same hopes and goals as I have.
But in addition to our primary goal and mission, your community hospital also provides exceptional career opportunities, creates spin-off jobs and additional economic activity in a region that has been impacted by external economic conditions beyond the control of the community.
When I was named CEO of Danville Regional Medical Center, one of the first things I wanted to understand was how important the hospital is to the Dan River Region in terms of jobs and economic impact.
As a newcomer to Danville, but aware of the history of the area, and the importance of hospitals, I knew Danville Regional was the second largest private employer for the area. I also knew the Dan River Region had been hurt by significant job losses due to outsourcing and the decline of the tobacco economy.
But to understand the full scope of your hospital’s economic impact, I asked renowned state economist Christine Chmura of Richmond to analyze the impact of your hospital.
According to her report released just last week, Danville Regional represents more than 5 percent of the employment base for Danville with a total economic impact of $183 million in the Dan River Region in 2009.
Last year, Danville Regional provided jobs to nearly 1,500 people, including 1,229 from Danville and Pittsylvania County. While the area has lost over 7,400 jobs in the last decade, the importance of Danville Regional as an employer has increased. Your hospital currently represents 5.6 percent of the employment in the city.
In addition to the direct jobs of our outstanding professionals at the hospital, including medical and non-medical personnel, the hospital also created an additional 558 jobs in the region.
Since 2005, Danville Regional has invested over $32 million in capital improvements. The Chmura study indicated that the impacts of those capital improvements resulted in 358 Virginia jobs (246 of those in the Dan River Region) and more than $50 million in direct, indirect and induced spending in the area. That extra economic impact of almost $18 million is the hidden benefit of major capital improvements, creating additional jobs not directly related to the underlying projects.
Further, in 2009 alone, the city of Danville received $1.5 million in tax payments from Danville Regional. This includes property taxes and BPOL taxes paid to the city. An additional $3.4 million in state taxes, including income tax, sales tax and other payments, were generated for the commonwealth of Virginia.
I know from more than 20 years experience working with hospitals across the South that a strong local hospital is critical to economic development. It is rare that a major employer will come to a community that lacks adequate health care, and access to quality affordable health care. That is why it is so important to maintain your community hospital: it’s beyond the care that your family may find it needs, it’s about recruiting quality high-paying jobs to this area to help with the economic recovery that Southside Virginia so desperately needs.
I urge everyone in the region to work with me to help support Danville Regional not only as the area’s only acute care hospital, but also to support and promote the jobs created, directly and indirectly, by your hospital.
The study also indicated concern that the creation of an ambulatory surgery center just a few miles from Danville Regional would put negative competitive pressures on your hospital and our ability to create and maintain jobs.
(article truncated due to length)
http://www2.godanriver.com/gdr/news/opinion/community_voices/article/drmc_a_jobs_engine_for_region/22538/
DRMC a jobs engine for region
By Eric Deaton
As the CEO of Danville’s only acute care, full-service hospital, my goal is to ensure access to affordable quality health care. Every day I walk the halls of the hospital, greeting patients, often grieving or concerned families, physicians, nurses and other medical and non-medical personnel, meeting people with the same hopes and goals as I have.
But in addition to our primary goal and mission, your community hospital also provides exceptional career opportunities, creates spin-off jobs and additional economic activity in a region that has been impacted by external economic conditions beyond the control of the community.
When I was named CEO of Danville Regional Medical Center, one of the first things I wanted to understand was how important the hospital is to the Dan River Region in terms of jobs and economic impact.
As a newcomer to Danville, but aware of the history of the area, and the importance of hospitals, I knew Danville Regional was the second largest private employer for the area. I also knew the Dan River Region had been hurt by significant job losses due to outsourcing and the decline of the tobacco economy.
But to understand the full scope of your hospital’s economic impact, I asked renowned state economist Christine Chmura of Richmond to analyze the impact of your hospital.
According to her report released just last week, Danville Regional represents more than 5 percent of the employment base for Danville with a total economic impact of $183 million in the Dan River Region in 2009.
Last year, Danville Regional provided jobs to nearly 1,500 people, including 1,229 from Danville and Pittsylvania County. While the area has lost over 7,400 jobs in the last decade, the importance of Danville Regional as an employer has increased. Your hospital currently represents 5.6 percent of the employment in the city.
In addition to the direct jobs of our outstanding professionals at the hospital, including medical and non-medical personnel, the hospital also created an additional 558 jobs in the region.
Since 2005, Danville Regional has invested over $32 million in capital improvements. The Chmura study indicated that the impacts of those capital improvements resulted in 358 Virginia jobs (246 of those in the Dan River Region) and more than $50 million in direct, indirect and induced spending in the area. That extra economic impact of almost $18 million is the hidden benefit of major capital improvements, creating additional jobs not directly related to the underlying projects.
Further, in 2009 alone, the city of Danville received $1.5 million in tax payments from Danville Regional. This includes property taxes and BPOL taxes paid to the city. An additional $3.4 million in state taxes, including income tax, sales tax and other payments, were generated for the commonwealth of Virginia.
I know from more than 20 years experience working with hospitals across the South that a strong local hospital is critical to economic development. It is rare that a major employer will come to a community that lacks adequate health care, and access to quality affordable health care. That is why it is so important to maintain your community hospital: it’s beyond the care that your family may find it needs, it’s about recruiting quality high-paying jobs to this area to help with the economic recovery that Southside Virginia so desperately needs.
I urge everyone in the region to work with me to help support Danville Regional not only as the area’s only acute care hospital, but also to support and promote the jobs created, directly and indirectly, by your hospital.
The study also indicated concern that the creation of an ambulatory surgery center just a few miles from Danville Regional would put negative competitive pressures on your hospital and our ability to create and maintain jobs.
(article truncated due to length)
http://www2.godanriver.com/gdr/news/opinion/community_voices/article/drmc_a_jobs_engine_for_region/22538/
DRMC a jobs engine for region
By Eric Deaton
As the CEO of Danville’s only acute care, full-service hospital, my goal is to ensure access to affordable quality health care. Every day I walk the halls of the hospital, greeting patients, often grieving or concerned families, physicians, nurses and other medical and non-medical personnel, meeting people with the same hopes and goals as I have.
But in addition to our primary goal and mission, your community hospital also provides exceptional career opportunities, creates spin-off jobs and additional economic activity in a region that has been impacted by external economic conditions beyond the control of the community.
When I was named CEO of Danville Regional Medical Center, one of the first things I wanted to understand was how important the hospital is to the Dan River Region in terms of jobs and economic impact.
As a newcomer to Danville, but aware of the history of the area, and the importance of hospitals, I knew Danville Regional was the second largest private employer for the area. I also knew the Dan River Region had been hurt by significant job losses due to outsourcing and the decline of the tobacco economy.
But to understand the full scope of your hospital’s economic impact, I asked renowned state economist Christine Chmura of Richmond to analyze the impact of your hospital.
According to her report released just last week, Danville Regional represents more than 5 percent of the employment base for Danville with a total economic impact of $183 million in the Dan River Region in 2009.
Last year, Danville Regional provided jobs to nearly 1,500 people, including 1,229 from Danville and Pittsylvania County. While the area has lost over 7,400 jobs in the last decade, the importance of Danville Regional as an employer has increased. Your hospital currently represents 5.6 percent of the employment in the city.
In addition to the direct jobs of our outstanding professionals at the hospital, including medical and non-medical personnel, the hospital also created an additional 558 jobs in the region.
Since 2005, Danville Regional has invested over $32 million in capital improvements. The Chmura study indicated that the impacts of those capital improvements resulted in 358 Virginia jobs (246 of those in the Dan River Region) and more than $50 million in direct, indirect and induced spending in the area. That extra economic impact of almost $18 million is the hidden benefit of major capital improvements, creating additional jobs not directly related to the underlying projects.
Further, in 2009 alone, the city of Danville received $1.5 million in tax payments from Danville Regional. This includes property taxes and BPOL taxes paid to the city. An additional $3.4 million in state taxes, including income tax, sales tax and other payments, were generated for the commonwealth of Virginia.
I know from more than 20 years experience working with hospitals across the South that a strong local hospital is critical to economic development. It is rare that a major employer will come to a community that lacks adequate health care, and access to quality affordable health care. That is why it is so important to maintain your community hospital: it’s beyond the care that your family may find it needs, it’s about recruiting quality high-paying jobs to this area to help with the economic recovery that Southside Virginia so desperately needs.
I urge everyone in the region to work with me to help support Danville Regional not only as the area’s only acute care hospital, but also to support and promote the jobs created, directly and indirectly, by your hospital.
(article truncated due to length)
http://www2.godanriver.com/gdr/news/opinion/community_voices/article/drmc_a_jobs_engine_for_region/22538/
DRMC a jobs engine for region
By Eric Deaton
As the CEO of Danville’s only acute care, full-service hospital, my goal is to ensure access to affordable quality health care. Every day I walk the halls of the hospital, greeting patients, often grieving or concerned families, physicians, nurses and other medical and non-medical personnel, meeting people with the same hopes and goals as I have.
But in addition to our primary goal and mission, your community hospital also provides exceptional career opportunities, creates spin-off jobs and additional economic activity in a region that has been impacted by external economic conditions beyond the control of the community.
When I was named CEO of Danville Regional Medical Center, one of the first things I wanted to understand was how important the hospital is to the Dan River Region in terms of jobs and economic impact.
As a newcomer to Danville, but aware of the history of the area, and the importance of hospitals, I knew Danville Regional was the second largest private employer for the area. I also knew the Dan River Region had been hurt by significant job losses due to outsourcing and the decline of the tobacco economy.
But to understand the full scope of your hospital’s economic impact, I asked renowned state economist Christine Chmura of Richmond to analyze the impact of your hospital.
According to her report released just last week, Danville Regional represents more than 5 percent of the employment base for Danville with a total economic impact of $183 million in the Dan River Region in 2009.
Last year, Danville Regional provided jobs to nearly 1,500 people, including 1,229 from Danville and Pittsylvania County. While the area has lost over 7,400 jobs in the last decade, the importance of Danville Regional as an employer has increased. Your hospital currently represents 5.6 percent of the employment in the city.
In addition to the direct jobs of our outstanding professionals at the hospital, including medical and non-medical personnel, the hospital also created an additional 558 jobs in the region.
Since 2005, Danville Regional has invested over $32 million in capital improvements. The Chmura study indicated that the impacts of those capital improvements resulted in 358 Virginia jobs (246 of those in the Dan River Region) and more than $50 million in direct, indirect and induced spending in the area. That extra economic impact of almost $18 million is the hidden benefit of major capital improvements, creating additional jobs not directly related to the underlying projects.
Further, in 2009 alone, the city of Danville received $1.5 million in tax payments from Danville Regional. This includes property taxes and BPOL taxes paid to the city. An additional $3.4 million in state taxes, including income tax, sales tax and other payments, were generated for the commonwealth of Virginia.
I know from more than 20 years experience working with hospitals across the South that a strong local hospital is critical to economic development. It is rare that a major employer will come to a community that lacks adequate health care, and access to quality affordable health care. That is why it is so important to maintain your community hospital: it’s beyond the care that your family may find it needs, it’s about recruiting quality high-paying jobs to this area to help with the economic recovery that Southside Virginia so desperately needs.
I urge everyone in the region to work with me to help support Danville Regional not only as the area’s only acute care hospital, but also to support and promote the jobs created, directly and indirectly, by your hospital.
(article truncated due to length)
First, stop reposting this propagandized crap!
"I urge everyone in the region to work with me to help support Danville Regional not only as the area’s only acute care hospital, but also to support and promote the jobs created, directly and indirectly, by your hospital. "
Second : Get bent - lifepoint wants us to support them ?
"your hospital?" HAHAHAHAHA thats a JOKE !!! OUR hospital was stolen and sold to the crap known as lifepoint...
"I know from more than 20 years experience working with hospitals across the South that a strong local hospital is critical"
In context that is a veiled threat. Also I've been to multiple lifepoint facilities all of them are WEAK and all of their communities are FAILING, I have yet to find any staff or physicians that stand with lifepoint.
Lifepoint needs to know many of us will never return to DRMC. I was at the Baseball game the other night and over herd several people talking about how bad DRMC was and the distance they have traveled to good healthcare. Just think how much time and money we will save when Centra comes to town. yes DRMC will lose jobs but thats going on now anyway. I think Centra will create more jobs for Danville then DRMC will lose and we know the care will be better.
Great editorial in the Register and Bee today:
http://www2.godanriver.com/gdr/news/opinion/editorials/danville_editorials/article/drmc_and_the_centra_challenge1/22719/
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Nothing tops the stethoscope....did that require a special permit?
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That is pretty a pathetic attempt to evade the issue of you failing lifepoint
I think some of you folks in Danville will recognize these familiar quotes from Lifpeoint CEO Bill Carpenter in an article about the purchase of Sumner Regional Medical Center:
"Carpenter said if the purchase is approved, LifePoint would make Sumner Regional Medical Center one of its flagship hospitals."
“We will not lay off employees at the hospital,” Carpenter said. “We won’t do anything at the hospital, as far as strategic direction goes, without sitting down with the employees and physicians of the hospital and talking to them about what they need. I’ve spent some time over at the hospital making rounds on the floors and talking to the employees, and it’s amazing how quickly they’ll tell you the kinds of things that they need to make improvements at the hospital.”
"Carpenter called the proposed sale “a new day” and hopes to move forward."
Isn't "a new day" the same schtick that the new Danville CEO is using around DRMC?
http://www.tennessean.com/article/20100709/GALLATIN01/100709044/LifePoint-anxious-to-close-Sumner-Regional-sale
Same old same old
Well yet another DR.leaving town. Way to go lifepoint,Keep it up and there will not be anyone left. Dr. Oates is leaving this fall.What a shame another fine surgeon gone. Let's see that leaves a grand total of 2 general surgeons.
Oates is leaving !!?
Where is he going ?
Thats what they want then they can bring in Doctors they will hire and you will have to see there docs more money for them.
If you're refering to hospitalists, they SUCK...
No lifepoint facility I've ever been in respects them at all, as they are generally lacking in interest, communication skills and availability, even the "leader" of the danville hospitalists cruises in on her own sweet time to discharge an ER patient...the NExT DAY, that's right she never showed up on the day of the visit and the ER says the hospitalist has to discharge the patient ...sooo they just admitted her costing time and money because the hospitalist never showed up !!!
Chalk another one up to Life Point. Dr. Caldwell is leaving in September. He informed his staff Monday.
Is it true that the director of ICU was terminated?
When is the OR manager, who is paid by the hour...not salary, going to be required to take flex days off? Instead, she is allowed to sit at the OR desk until 5 or 6 pm racking up overtime. Wouldn't a good leader do as she requires her staff to do? I guess the adjective "good" is the answer here.
Did anyone see the mews tonight? Seems like Centra has purchased their own heliocopter. Looks like they are getting ready to open their E.R.Look out DRMC.
LifePoint wants to put up a big sign to get people to come to their hospital while Centra bought their own helicopter to transport you to theirs!!! WAY TO GO E.W. Danville does have a helipad open 24/7...
Centra can't / won't build their E.R. in Danville without approval of the COPN for imaging. You can't really have an E.R. without X-rays. It'll be 6 months before Centra finds out if it's approved or not.
I guess we'll see....
That's ok , Centra can fly around the toxic waste dump on Coles Hill after this part of the county is sold out as a toxic waste dump for play money for northern VA and Richmond. Danville is losing what was left of it's airport, it'll cost us traffic to VIR and Averett's Aviation Program so...With no hospital and no semblance of an airport and a moniker as a toxic cancer cluster for the next 10,000 years it won't matter that Centra (and everyone else) flies around Danville. Richmond has been using southside for it's piggybank for long enough.DRMC and Coles Hill are the final nails in the coffin...
Only reason deathpoint (lifepoint)has access to a helipad 24/7 is because they don't have to maintain it and it's free for them. Also the transportation to and from the helipad is FREE for them. Now if deathpoint had to pay for the helipad and the transportation to the helipad you had better believe they'd cut the service in a heartbeat... even if they charged for the transport they'd probably want to charge the flight crew for access to "their" helipad even though it is NOT theirs.
I know the helipad doesn't belong to DeathPoint. I help run air transports from the helipad to the hospital for almost 15 years!!!!
I did too..
Who got fired for smoking last week?Heard that there were several.
Yeah...heard they were fired for smoking in the designated smoking area within the "non-smoking" campus!
An email has been sent out to DRMC employees that no raises will be given this year. Advice given by OR management, "Just be happy you're getting your hours"
Here's where your raises went:
From the Associated Press --
"LifePoint profits rose 43 percent in the second quarter compared to the same period a year ago. Earnings were $37.6 million on revenue of $790.6 million. Earnings per diluted share came in at 69 cents, compared to average analyst estimates of 62 cents per share, according to Thomson Reuters. Analysts had predicted revenue of $782.3 million for the quarter.
“Our performance in the second quarter remained strong across the board. Our results reflected the success of our strategy to enhance performance through improving the quality of care provided at our hospitals, recruiting the right physicians to communities where they are needed, expanding service lines, improving hospital emergency departments, and making selective acquisitions,” said CEO Bill Carpenter."
You can bet the Lifepoint leadership in Brentwood got their bonuses this year.
Not a word of truth from the CEO....as usual.
lifepoint is only good at creative accounting that appears solid...it's all a lie...as usual
Were you surprised? Same old song and dance,different CEO
Yep. Eric Deaton is a smiley face sticker on the same pile of crap.
NO RAISES at MOSES-CONE this year either.
MOSES CONE didn't make RECORD PROFITS either.
I guess they decided to buy a hyphen for Mr. Cone's name instead of giving raises.
Cone typically reinvests in times of lean economies and thus in a little over 15 years Cone (and Greensboro in general) has surpassed Danville many times over, be kinda hard to equate financial strategies of a SUCCESFUL NON Profit to the failings of a p*$$ poor city government that has failed to initiate any growth and sold the only City held asset that was viable.
Mr Cone obviously had more brains and influence than the whole of danville's "pillars" who have been good ole boy networked and inbred to the detriment of what could be a fine southern gem.
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Pretty interesting how the non-sensical posts start appearing when anyone gets critical of Lifepoint on this blog, yet when there are no postings for long periods of time, the garbage disappears, too.
Hmmm. Coincidence?
Danville Practice Joins Centra
Dominion Primary Care in Danville on Monday announced joining Centra Medical Group. This makes it the first group of Danville doctors to affiliate with Centra.
Dominion Primary Care in Danville on Monday announced joining Centra Medical Group. This makes it the first group of Danville doctors to affiliate with Centra.
“We’re very excited about this. We think that it’s going to be a great new relationship and we’re really looking forward to adding other primary care physicians to Danville,” said Skip Leavitt, vice president of practice management for Centra.
Lynchburg-based Centra continues to see a steady stream of patients from the Danville area, Leavitt said.
Now, patients of Drs. William Hickson, James Milam and Pradeep Pradhan at Dominion Primary Care will find it easier to go to Centra facilities or be referred to Centra specialists as patient information would be integrated, Leavitt added.
Centra Medical Group came to Danville in April 2009 by bringing specialists to serve local patients. It allowed local primary care doctors to refer patients to specialists locally.
Patients will still be referred according to their needs and wants, including to Danville Regional Medical Center.
Dr. Hickson, senior partner, released a statement through Leavitt where he said he thinks it’s important that local residents have a choice in the Danville area and that Dominion Primary Care wanted to align itself with a high quality health-care organization — the nonprofit Centra health-care system.
Centra already started recruiting for primary care for Danville and now it will also recruit for Dominion, Leavitt said. The combination of Centra Medical Group now having both primary care and specialists in Danville will help.
“There’s quite a shortage of primary care in the Danville area,” Leavitt said. “We think this is going to provide a platform to start to address some of that.”
Additionally, care coordination is easier between a hospital and medical practice if they are part of the same organization, Leavitt added. Many new physicians also feel more secure working with a larger entity.
In other news, Centra Medical Group is renovating a building it leased on Executive Drive to expand its specialty practice in Danville, Leavitt said. Centra will announce when that opens.
Specialists are seeing about five times as many patients per month this year than last year and they need to spend more time in Danville, he explained. They are currently sharing offices by Piedmont Primecare East on Airport Drive.
Centra Medical Group also has practices in Gretna, Altavista, Lynchburg, Big Island, Brookneal, Moneta and Farmville.
For more info or to make an appointment at Dominion Primary Care, call (434) 791-1562.
Need more local physicians to sign on with Centra....The END HAS BEGUN...
DRMC had a group of world class MD's, then it was sold to LifePt. by 5 world class idiots. The good MD's were either pushed out or woke up and ran out of dville. Now LifePt. runs the joint with free labor from a DO school(and residents at that). I guess now as an even lower cost cutting plan they employ murderers and medical personnel impersonators. Hope the employees and patients patronizing DRMC enjoy padding the pockets of the fat cats in Brentwood.
I hear the impersonator has been at it apox. a year. HOW DID THEY LET THAT HAPPEN?
Yeah,working in the ER and making rounds for some dr he worked for. Apparently for quite some time.
If it was a year it should be enough to shut lifepoint down, each patient that person "treated" should have a reckless endangerment/negligence/assault-battery case against the individual and the hospital.
Pretty smart guy,maybe he should manage the hospital. He seems to get things done.I'm sure they will find someone to blame for this,but probably not the ones responsible.
what he did was impersonation and battery.
Yeah,well how about the hospital's responsibility in this mess.It would not have happened if they didn't let it.
Don't get me wrong I agree with ya bust him and the hospital.
I can't stand it....If I hear one more lie about "more physicians are here at DRMC" and "Services are markedly improved" I might just puke !
Meanwhile Centra is now in the top 6% in the NATION for treating Cardiac emergencies---Danville is still at the bottom...and will always be at the bottom if lifepoint owns it.
We continue to lose quality physicians and I expect more. Of course we will keep those doctors with questionable abilities like Henderson, Hurtado, and Owusu-Yaw. It is a shame DRMC has fallen so bad it can not recruit quality medical personnel.
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STUPID
Adirondack Medical Center's statement...."Excellent Health Care Close to Home"
Did anyone from DRMC relocate there?
Another one bites the dust! Dr Embry, the heart surgeon, is leaving. Last one to leave DRMC please turn off the lights.
Is he quiting medicine to persue a boxing career?
When is Embry leaving?
Soon, maybe October.Really don't know all the details.
Tune in to ESPN to see Embrey vs Cath Lab!
Did DRMC take the now defunct foundation money? Like take back the money they sold the hospital with. Who else did they pay off?
Heard that they bought the Ortho. clinic and Honea so they won't support Centra any longer.
Different foundation. The Danville Regional Foundation, funded with the $200 million from the sale of DRMC, is still flying high, controlled by Bob Ashby, Ben Davenport and Charlie Majors.
You remember them, don't you? They're the guys who said "Let's sell the hospital to an absentee landlord, for-profit company so we can play with the money any way we want, rather than serve those irritating poor people of Danville."
Yep. Honea and Kramer are now Eric Deaton's newest best friends. He started paying them to take call in the ED so they'd stop complaining about the hospital and stop working with Centra. The rest of the docs still have to work in the ED for free. I guess the squeaky wheel really does get the grease.
Pretty sad to see how quickly those guys turned on Centra after being the most vocal supporters of bringing the surgery center to Danville. Seems very clear now that all they cared about was putting more money in their own pockets, not making medical care better here in Danville.
I bet Centra won't forget the Quislings. Dare say the Centra Danville Medical Group won't be referring any patients their way.
What's up with the peg board on the ground floor? Is this an invasion of privacy.....or just more fear tactics ???!!!!
The peg board supposedly lists names of those who have supported Centra coming to Danville.
Does the persons name get removed after they are paid off to keep quiet?
Since virtually every citizen in Danville supports Centra they'll need a bigger peg board...such a childish undertaking for a supposed "professional" corporation. Oh wait that's it, it's a childish/petty corporation, not a hospital.
I still hope Centra will open here.
Must be a heluva big pegboard
Soooooo.. another MD will not be taking patients in the hospital anymore because of lifepoint......I'd hate to have a "hospitalist" treating me for pulmonary stuff, especially when they aren't available or don't show up half of the time.
Great pulmonary care up at Centra.
And, they have trained critical care docs working in the intensive care unit, not completely inexperienced and untrained interns right out school - like at Danville Regional.
Intensivists instead of "hospitalists" Now that's wht Centra has been in top 100 Cardio and Top 50 Safe Hospitals for so long use the money (NOT waste it on CxO's) for building a better facility like DRMC WAS doing before it was stolen from the people that PAID for it and sold...We need Centra here !!!
Centra heart surgery program awarded
By Staff
Published: September 17, 2010
The Society of Thoracic Surgeons has awarded Centra with its highest rating of three stars for its open heart surgery program at Centra Lynchburg General Hospital, the hospital said in a news release Friday.
Centra has received this award every year since its inception four years ago and is the only hospital in the state of Virginia to receive this three-star ranking all four years. The hospital said that patients’ clogged arteries are consistently opened faster than the national gold standard of 90 minutes, and only six percent of hospitals in the country are able to achieve this.
The study results were published in the October edition of Consumer Reports magazine
Sucks to be lifepoint !!!!!
"Sucks to be lifepoint !!!!!"
I wouldn't feel too sorry for them. They did to themselves: they are victims of their own greed and stupidity.
Yes they did. I don't feel sorry for them , but it does suck to be them, lifepoint is pitiful...it's a shame what has happened to what was "our" hospital.
So certain dept's employees are no longer allowed to "unwind" in their own lounge. I guess they unwind on the way to the parking lot or during their drive home. Yep, those management classes seem to be working!!
Pretty soon they can "unwind" in the unemployment line as well.
Watch out - admissions and revenue are down. We all know what that means....
Which dept's ?
More layoffs ?
OR lounge door has been locked. I don't know why....all that's in there is a refrigerator and a couple of chairs. Years ago when it was being built, the manager (same one as today) refused to put a tv in the lounge despite the fact that other depts were putting televisions in theirs. Wouldn't want the OR staff to feel relaxed!
It seems revenue continues be down---in healthcare in general but more acutely probably in Danville. Regionally, the ability to recruit certain specialists continues to be difficult.....more so in Danville. If one has doubts, please ask Andrew Popovich, DRMC's physician recruiter. If you want to truly get a feel for how the established MD's feel, ask to chat with Patti Schwemmer, the DRMC MD liaison.
Why? PAYOR BASE,of course. Yet , the reputation of LifePoint doesn't add a great deal of appeal to MD'S(specialists specifically) to locate to the 24541/24540 zip codes.
Payor base isn't down in Danville they just go to other hospitals ...
Moses Cone is currently building a new 7 story tower to handle the increasing patient load...drive by there it's huge...
Hospital in Bluefield WVa just bought there hospital back from a for-profit hospital and made it a non-profit again and are expecting to increase it's size and already have physicians and surgeons waiting...the for profit was trying to cut the size even more...
From Business Net:
"It really boils down to whether the finance guys learn the prime lesson of the PPMC(Physician Practice Management Companies)debacle: Since they don’t know anything about healthcare, they should leave the operational side to those who do."
"Hospital in Bluefield WVa just bought there hospital back from a for-profit hospital"
That doesn't appear to be true. Community Health Systems put in a successful bid through a shell company:
September 18, 2010
BRMC sale takes big step
By BILL ARCHER
Bluefield Daily Telegraph
— BLUEFIELD — The bidding wasn’t spirited, and the auction was over in a flash, but an entity called Bluefield Hospital Company LLC took a giant step on Friday morning with a $5 million bid as Community Health Systems Inc., cleared another hurdle in its efforts to acquire Bluefield Regional Medical Center.
Brian Cochran, Bluefield city solicitor conducted the auction on behalf of the Bluefield Municipal Buildings Commission. Cochran explained that only one bidder qualified to participate in the auction by submitting a $15,000 non-refundable bid deposit as well as a letter of intent to acquire several parcels of land related to BRMC at 500 Cherry Street.
Cochran explained that the minimum bid would be $5 million, and said that the successful bidder must enter into a purchase agreement with the commission and close within 45 days of the auction.
Bill Hawley, new chief executive officer of Bluefield Regional Medical Center, said he was happy to “submit a $5 million bid” on behalf of Bluefield Hospital Company LLC.
“This is an important step in the process, but not the final step,” Hawley said after Cochran closed the auction. Two hospital board members — Marc Meachum and Anne Crowe — attended the auction, but did not make any formal remarks. Rich Bezjak, vice chair of the Municipal Buildings Commission also attended, but also did not make any formal remarks.
Hawley, 39, is a native of Huntington who earned his undergraduate degree at Marshall University and received a graduate degree from Xavier University. He said that he visited Bluefield when he was a student at Huntington East High School. He said that he and his family came to watch his sister participate in a volleyball match.
“I visited Bluefield after that,” he said. “I remember doing some Christmas shopping at the Mercer Mall.”
Community Health Systems Inc., of Franklin, Tenn., gave a non-binding letter of intent seeking to acquire BRMC on March 31. Since that time, BRMC has reported on the progress of the acquisition. The BRMC board of directors announced on Aug. 26, that the West Virginia Health Care Authority approved CHS’s certificate of need to acquire BRMC.
– Contact Bill Archer at barcher@bdtonline.com
"Hospital in Bluefield WVa just bought there hospital back from a for-profit hospital"
That doesn't appear to be true. Community Health Systems put in a successful bid through a shell company:
September 18, 2010
BRMC sale takes big step
By BILL ARCHER
Bluefield Daily Telegraph
— BLUEFIELD — The bidding wasn’t spirited, and the auction was over in a flash, but an entity called Bluefield Hospital Company LLC took a giant step on Friday morning with a $5 million bid as Community Health Systems Inc., cleared another hurdle in its efforts to acquire Bluefield Regional Medical Center.
Brian Cochran, Bluefield city solicitor conducted the auction on behalf of the Bluefield Municipal Buildings Commission. Cochran explained that only one bidder qualified to participate in the auction by submitting a $15,000 non-refundable bid deposit as well as a letter of intent to acquire several parcels of land related to BRMC at 500 Cherry Street.
Cochran explained that the minimum bid would be $5 million, and said that the successful bidder must enter into a purchase agreement with the commission and close within 45 days of the auction.
Bill Hawley, new chief executive officer of Bluefield Regional Medical Center, said he was happy to “submit a $5 million bid” on behalf of Bluefield Hospital Company LLC.
“This is an important step in the process, but not the final step,” Hawley said after Cochran closed the auction. Two hospital board members — Marc Meachum and Anne Crowe — attended the auction, but did not make any formal remarks. Rich Bezjak, vice chair of the Municipal Buildings Commission also attended, but also did not make any formal remarks.
Hawley, 39, is a native of Huntington who earned his undergraduate degree at Marshall University and received a graduate degree from Xavier University. He said that he visited Bluefield when he was a student at Huntington East High School. He said that he and his family came to watch his sister participate in a volleyball match.
“I visited Bluefield after that,” he said. “I remember doing some Christmas shopping at the Mercer Mall.”
Community Health Systems Inc., of Franklin, Tenn., gave a non-binding letter of intent seeking to acquire BRMC on March 31. Since that time, BRMC has reported on the progress of the acquisition. The BRMC board of directors announced on Aug. 26, that the West Virginia Health Care Authority approved CHS’s certificate of need to acquire BRMC.
– Contact Bill Archer at barcher@bdtonline.com
"Hospital in Bluefield WVa just bought there hospital back from a for-profit hospital"
That doesn't appear to be true. Community Health Systems put in a successful bid through a shell company:
September 18, 2010
BRMC sale takes big step
By BILL ARCHER
Bluefield Daily Telegraph
— BLUEFIELD — The bidding wasn’t spirited, and the auction was over in a flash, but an entity called Bluefield Hospital Company LLC took a giant step on Friday morning with a $5 million bid as Community Health Systems Inc., cleared another hurdle in its efforts to acquire Bluefield Regional Medical Center.
Brian Cochran, Bluefield city solicitor conducted the auction on behalf of the Bluefield Municipal Buildings Commission. Cochran explained that only one bidder qualified to participate in the auction by submitting a $15,000 non-refundable bid deposit as well as a letter of intent to acquire several parcels of land related to BRMC at 500 Cherry Street.
Cochran explained that the minimum bid would be $5 million, and said that the successful bidder must enter into a purchase agreement with the commission and close within 45 days of the auction.
Bill Hawley, new chief executive officer of Bluefield Regional Medical Center, said he was happy to “submit a $5 million bid” on behalf of Bluefield Hospital Company LLC.
“This is an important step in the process, but not the final step,” Hawley said after Cochran closed the auction. Two hospital board members — Marc Meachum and Anne Crowe — attended the auction, but did not make any formal remarks. Rich Bezjak, vice chair of the Municipal Buildings Commission also attended, but also did not make any formal remarks.
Hawley, 39, is a native of Huntington who earned his undergraduate degree at Marshall University and received a graduate degree from Xavier University. He said that he visited Bluefield when he was a student at Huntington East High School. He said that he and his family came to watch his sister participate in a volleyball match.
“I visited Bluefield after that,” he said. “I remember doing some Christmas shopping at the Mercer Mall.”
Community Health Systems Inc., of Franklin, Tenn., gave a non-binding letter of intent seeking to acquire BRMC on March 31. Since that time, BRMC has reported on the progress of the acquisition. The BRMC board of directors announced on Aug. 26, that the West Virginia Health Care Authority approved CHS’s certificate of need to acquire BRMC.
– Contact Bill Archer at barcher@bdtonline.com
"Hospital in Bluefield WVa just bought there hospital back from a for-profit hospital"
That doesn't appear to be true. Community Health Systems put in a successful bid through a shell company:
September 18, 2010
BRMC sale takes big step
By BILL ARCHER
Bluefield Daily Telegraph
— BLUEFIELD — The bidding wasn’t spirited, and the auction was over in a flash, but an entity called Bluefield Hospital Company LLC took a giant step on Friday morning with a $5 million bid as Community Health Systems Inc., cleared another hurdle in its efforts to acquire Bluefield Regional Medical Center.
Brian Cochran, Bluefield city solicitor conducted the auction on behalf of the Bluefield Municipal Buildings Commission. Cochran explained that only one bidder qualified to participate in the auction by submitting a $15,000 non-refundable bid deposit as well as a letter of intent to acquire several parcels of land related to BRMC at 500 Cherry Street.
Cochran explained that the minimum bid would be $5 million, and said that the successful bidder must enter into a purchase agreement with the commission and close within 45 days of the auction.
Bill Hawley, new chief executive officer of Bluefield Regional Medical Center, said he was happy to “submit a $5 million bid” on behalf of Bluefield Hospital Company LLC.
“This is an important step in the process, but not the final step,” Hawley said after Cochran closed the auction. Two hospital board members — Marc Meachum and Anne Crowe — attended the auction, but did not make any formal remarks. Rich Bezjak, vice chair of the Municipal Buildings Commission also attended, but also did not make any formal remarks.
Hawley, 39, is a native of Huntington who earned his undergraduate degree at Marshall University and received a graduate degree from Xavier University. He said that he visited Bluefield when he was a student at Huntington East High School. He said that he and his family came to watch his sister participate in a volleyball match.
“I visited Bluefield after that,” he said. “I remember doing some Christmas shopping at the Mercer Mall.”
Community Health Systems Inc., of Franklin, Tenn., gave a non-binding letter of intent seeking to acquire BRMC on March 31. Since that time, BRMC has reported on the progress of the acquisition. The BRMC board of directors announced on Aug. 26, that the West Virginia Health Care Authority approved CHS’s certificate of need to acquire BRMC.
– Contact Bill Archer at barcher@bdtonline.com
Looks like CHS, well known to ruin hospitals, has tried to pull the wool over their eyes and succeeded.
I feel sorry for them, they'll be getting screwed by another group of tennessee mis-managers...
So how many surgeons are left? 2 ?
how many surgeries a day ?
2-3 ?
Hey, if they keep firing people for bogus reasons they won't have any staff left,but.......isn't that what they want?
If you don't have any patients coming to the hospital you don't need any staff, now do you? Duh.
Who thinks there is an HOSTILE work environment in the OR at DRMC???
I DO
yawn....
Maybe, but since there are so few cases all the staff gets to go home by 1PM, so who cares.
How many daily cases?
It's a parade !!.....of staff and physicians out the door.
Where is Eric Deaton these days? I thought he was going to make everything better. Does he still make rounds on every floor every morning?Does he know what goes on in the OR?
No,too busy buying people.
Well, does anyone actually know how many OR cases per day ?
OR = LIES
have never seen anything like it!
Again : How many cases per day ?
Was told they are doing maybe five cases daily. Was also told that if you go Prime care and need to be followed up by an orthpod. that D.O.C. will not see you because Prime Care supports Centra. Oh well, Centra needs to open their own orthopediac office in Danville.
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