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West Virginia Hospitals Deal With Protest
Spartanburg Herald-Journal ^ | Jan.2,2003 | GAVIN McCORMICK

Posted on 01/02/2003 4:29:02 PM PST by Captain Shady

By GAVIN McCORMICK
Associated Press Writer

Four West Virginia hospitals cut staff hours and transferred more patients Thursday because of a surgeons' walkout to protest malpractice costs.

State officials planned to announce an emergency program Thursday afternoon to ensure medical service to patients in the state's northern panhandle.

More than two dozen orthopedic, general and heart surgeons in the area began 30-day leaves of absence Wednesday or planned to begin leaves in the next few days to protest medical malpractice costs.

They want the state to make it harder to file malpractice lawsuits, which they say would eventually lower their insurance premiums. They also want the state to seek help from insurance companies and other third parties to pay a larger share of their costs.

The state's emergency program will involve ambulance transfer and patient referral procedures, State Insurance and Retirement Services Director Tom Susman said.

"We know there's concern among area residents, and our top priority is to ensure the citizens of the northern panhandle get the medical care they need," Susman said.

Two patients were moved late Wednesday and two others Thursday, raising the number transferred in the two-day protest to five.

The four affected hospitals also began reducing shifts of operating room nurses and other surgical support staff.

"It's definitely generating worries within our staff, both about their own financial needs and about the health of the community," said Howard Gamble, spokesman for Ohio Valley Medical Center in Wheeling.

A surgeon taking part in a job action said doctors' pleas for help have been ignored by state officials.

"We have had many meetings with state legislators and past governors. We have asked for help in the past. It seems as if it has fallen on deaf ears," Dr. Greg Saracco said on CBS' "Early Show." "Physicians no longer want to come to work. Physicians are afraid to accept liability."

State Insurance and Retirement Services Director Tom Susman has said Gov. Bob Wise will offer details of a new malpractice insurance plan in his State of the State address next week.

Last-minute talks with state officials failed to stop the protest. A similar walkout in Pennsylvania was averted when Gov.-elect Ed Rendell promised to work for a solution.

At least 18 of 19 surgeons at Wheeling Hospital are beginning 30-day leaves of absence, and 11 others have asked for leaves from Weirton Medical Center. Ohio Valley Medical Center in Wheeling and Reynolds Memorial Hospital in Glen Dale said surgeons there were taking leaves, but it was unclear how many.

All four hospitals are keeping emergency rooms open. But, with the exception of plastic surgeons, they have almost no emergency surgeons available, which will require most patients to be transferred to hospitals in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Morgantown.

Dr. Donald Hofreuter, Wheeling Hospital's chief executive officer, said he understands the doctors' frustration, but he also is concerned about patient care.

One Wheeling Hospital patient needing emergency surgery Wednesday morning was transferred 88 miles to Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown, and two heart patients were transferred to Pennsylvania hospitals, Hofreuter said.

On Thursday, Weirton Medical Center transferred two patients to a hospital in Steubenville, Ohio. Wheeling Hospital transferred two heart patients to Pittsburgh-area hospitals. The four required non-emergency surgery.

Wheeling Hospital temporarily reinstated one of its surgeons who had taken a leave of absence so the surgeon could help a patient who couldn't be transferred, Hofreuter said. He declined to give details.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: West Virginia
KEYWORDS: doctors; healthcosts; medicalcare
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Another day of bad medical situation in West Virginia.
1 posted on 01/02/2003 4:29:02 PM PST by Captain Shady
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To: Captain Shady
Go Docs!
2 posted on 01/02/2003 4:37:02 PM PST by DAnconia55
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To: Captain Shady
Why just the northern panhandle? Walk out in KANAWHA COUNTY! Only then will the trial lawyer politicians get it.
3 posted on 01/02/2003 4:44:01 PM PST by Timesink
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To: Captain Shady
Don't expect anything of substance from the dimwitted Dem Gov. Wise. We West Virginians will just sit tight, hoping to avoid catastrophic illness and injury pending resolution of the matter!
4 posted on 01/02/2003 4:44:30 PM PST by mountaineer
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To: Timesink
My guess is that the most outrageous (read, baseless) medical malpractice suits are filed in the 1st judicial circuit, comprised of Hancock, Brooke and Ohio counties.
5 posted on 01/02/2003 4:46:35 PM PST by mountaineer
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To: mountaineer
Don't expect anything of substance from the dimwitted Dem Gov. Wise. We West Virginians will just sit tight, hoping to avoid catastrophic illness and injury pending resolution of the matter!

For once, living in Huntington will have a positive side!

6 posted on 01/02/2003 4:49:48 PM PST by Timesink
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To: Captain Shady
Hey, Hofreuter. Be careful about COBRA and EMTALA when you transfer those patients. If they think they've been transferred for economic reasons, they can sue YOU and the feds can apply criminal sanctions. There's more to worry about than malpractice, you know.

W VA has been a problem for a long time. Many people have been going to Kentucky and Virginia for years for their medical care because WVa is so dicey.

7 posted on 01/02/2003 4:51:00 PM PST by Mamzelle
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To: mountaineer
My guess is that the most outrageous (read, baseless) medical malpractice suits are filed in the 1st judicial circuit, comprised of Hancock, Brooke and Ohio counties.

Makes sense. I don't ever remember hearing of too many out-of-control damage rewards here in the *cough* metropolitan area, at least not by the usual standards, and my mother's worked in the medical profession all her life.

Interesting sidenote: State Farm is going to stop selling car and home insurance in the state.

8 posted on 01/02/2003 4:52:26 PM PST by Timesink
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To: Mamzelle
Who is John Galt?
9 posted on 01/02/2003 4:52:50 PM PST by Jonathan
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To: Jonathan
This bit of news is a real interesting juxtaposition to ambualance chaser Edwards' announcement that he is running for the Presidency.
10 posted on 01/02/2003 5:13:47 PM PST by Credo
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To: Captain Shady
This is less of a strike and more of the economic destruction of the noble medical profession (think Frist) by the utterly corrupt, evil, unregulated lawyer industry (think Edwards, Bill, or Hillary.
11 posted on 01/02/2003 5:22:49 PM PST by friendly
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To: Credo
This bit of news is a real interesting juxtaposition to ambualance chaser Edwards' announcement that he is running for the Presidency.

I had the exact same thought as Jim Lehrer's toady said Edwards came from poverty but "made his fortune as a trial lawyer." They think that's a GOOD thing.

BTW, isn't the state of Nevada next on this hit list? I think I read the malpractice situation is nearly critical there, too.

12 posted on 01/02/2003 5:25:00 PM PST by lainie
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To: Captain Shady
National Review did a cover story on this situation a year or so ago. It was titled, "When Trial Lawyers Attack". One point the story made was that in W. Va. there tends to be a cultural mistrust of the successful that is expressed in the desire to sue doctors. A typical West Virginian's response to the problem posed by litigation against doctors is, "But insurance pays for it, right?"

According to the article, physicians have been leaving their W. Va. practices and departing for other states for years now.

13 posted on 01/02/2003 5:53:18 PM PST by WarrenC
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To: Captain Shady
Robert Byrd must be proud.
14 posted on 01/02/2003 7:37:48 PM PST by LiberalBuster
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To: Captain Shady
Things are bad enough. But imagine how much worse healthcare would be if Hitlery got her socialist healthcare policy in the early 1990s.
15 posted on 01/02/2003 7:39:35 PM PST by LiberalBuster
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To: Captain Shady
Another day of bad medical situation in West Virginia.

It's not just West Virginia. This is happening in lots of states, and we ain't seen nothin' yet (to quote The Great One).

16 posted on 01/02/2003 7:44:02 PM PST by CFC__VRWC
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To: LiberalBuster
Things are bad enough. But imagine how much worse healthcare would be if Hitlery got her socialist healthcare policy in the early 1990s.

Don't count Hillarycare as dead yet - if we can't break the death grip the trial lawyers have on the health care industry, it will be coming as the "solution."

17 posted on 01/02/2003 7:47:28 PM PST by CFC__VRWC
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To: Captain Shady
Doctors should start refusing to treat Lawyers, Paralegals, Legal Secretaries, anyone who works for a plaintiff law firm, and their families.

It ain't Joe Sixpack and Sallie Housecoat who are driving this problem, it's lawyers.

18 posted on 01/02/2003 7:49:23 PM PST by LibKill
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To: Jonathan

19 posted on 01/02/2003 10:00:03 PM PST by mvpel
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To: lainie
BTW, isn't the state of Nevada next on this hit list? I think I read the malpractice situation is nearly critical there, too.

The Shakespearean option is in order here. I heard things are bad in Nevada. I live in OH so I have heard this is happening in WV. W and the GOP must get their arms around tort reform. Tort Lawyers are the key to Dem Party power.

20 posted on 01/03/2003 2:41:07 AM PST by Credo
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