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Philadelphia's Maternity Ward Crunch
CBS online ^ | 5/2207

Posted on 05/22/2007 5:28:56 PM PDT by Kimmers

CBS) Melissa Suszynski had the perfect pregnancy. But two weeks before her due date, she woke up covered in blood.

"I said, 'What am I going to do? What am I going to do? I'm bleeding all over the place!'" Suszynski told CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric.

Suszynski's placenta had ruptured. She was rushed to the nearest hospital, Jeanes Medical Center, just seven miles away. Twelve minutes after she was admitted, she gave birth.

"They said if it was five minutes longer, I wouldn't have made it; my baby or I wouldn't have made it," Suszynski said.

Living close to Jeanes saved their lives. But next week, going there won't be an option for new mothers: The hospital is closing its maternity ward.

A decade ago there were 42 working maternity wards in the Philadelphia area. Jeanes will be the 14th to close — that's one-third of them shutting down.

The reason: money.

Obstetricians in the Philadelphia area pay among the steepest rates for malpractice insurance in the country — about $160,000 a year. Also, if the patient is on Medicaid, the hospitals pays half the bill. So every time a doctor delivers a baby, the hospital loses money.

"That truly is the problem: If you're losing on every birth, there are no economies of scale. There is no way to, through volume, to make this service more financially viable," said Meg McGlodrick, CEO of Abington Hospital.

The result: What amounts to a medical crisis, leaving the ones that are still open bursting at the seams.

Take Abington. Ten years ago, the hospital delivered about 3,000 babies. This year, officials expect that number to pass 5,000.

The hospital can stay in business because most of its patients don't need Medicaid and can afford better insurance. But Dr. Amy Mackey worries about the other hospitals and the new moms that may not be getting the care they deserve.

"I think that the service that they want is going to be jeopardized as a result of the lack of facilities and the lack of resources," Mackey said.

Resources that many hospitals can no longer afford and others can't live without.

"We need to have it there; if it wasn't there, it could have ended up horribly," Suszynski said.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: closing; materinity
What they failed to point out the reason malpractice rates are so high is because of lawyers like John Edwards.....
1 posted on 05/22/2007 5:29:00 PM PDT by Kimmers
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To: Kimmers

... or Arlen Specter.


2 posted on 05/22/2007 5:31:40 PM PDT by Arm_Bears (Teddy Kennedy: Trust Fund Terrorist)
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To: Kimmers

You beat me to the punch about John Edwards. I wish the MSM would explain more often and more fully that he made his entire fortune by being a malpractice ambulance chasing lawyer, specializing in so-called birth defect cases. He personally has won multi-million dollars judgements against OB docs.

I haven’t really heard John talk about health care in his Two Americas. It would be the supreme irony if he wants quality affordable care for all, when he’s one of the reasons that care is not always available.


3 posted on 05/22/2007 5:36:40 PM PDT by Dilbert San Diego
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To: Kimmers

At Dallas’ Parkland Hospital the majority of births are to illegal immigrant mothere! Who pays? The taxpayers of Dallas County.


4 posted on 05/22/2007 5:46:43 PM PDT by Doctor Don
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To: Kimmers

I do medical malpractice insurance and trust me, the attorneys are driving the OB right out of the delivery rooms !


5 posted on 05/22/2007 5:58:49 PM PDT by TaxxMann (Can't put a dollar sign on citizenship - oh wait, they just did !)
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To: Kimmers
It's not just the obstetricians and obstetrics wards that are in trouble in PA. Any higher-risk specialty faces these difficulties with high malpractice insurance. Despite repeated efforts to address this in Harrisburg, the process always seems to get bogged down by powerful interests resistant to change. For those of us living here, it's disturbing to see doctors quit or leave the state.

Abington Hospital is our nearest hospital. It's a good one - and very busy. They keep expanding their facilities, so something must be going well for them.

6 posted on 05/22/2007 7:22:01 PM PDT by Think free or die
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To: Kimmers

The Penna malpractice mess is working out well for those of us in south Jersey - lots of docs leaving Philly and setting up shop over here - wife’s orthopedist is really happy now that several of his old buddies from Jefferson are starting to work out of Cooper in Camden - now we don’t have to cross the river and drive in the Philadelphia congestion to get some of the best care......


7 posted on 05/22/2007 9:06:24 PM PDT by Intolerant in NJ
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