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|    Re: What should we investigate??    |
|    23 Jan 15 05:29:34    |
      From: hounddog23x@gmail.com              > at Singing River, about 60 percent of the hospital's reimbursement come from       Medicaid and Medicare.                                   Holland: Singing River still losing money, but less than before        System chief projects loss of $8M, down from $35M               BY PAUL HAMPTON, JPHAMPTON@SUNHERALD.COM        January 14, 2015 | Updated 20 hours ago                             System chief projects loss of $8M, down from $35M               By PAUL HAMPTON                      jphampton@sunherald.com               PASCAGOULA -- Singing River Health System chief Kevin Holland said the       system's turnaround plan is working and is cutting the financially troubled       system's losses.               Holland, who was named CEO in March, told the Rotary Club here SRHS lost about       $1.9 million in the first three months of the fiscal year, which could mean an       annual loss of about $8 million. The system lost about $35 million the       previous year, he said.                      "When we learned about this we were two months into fiscal year '14," he said.               "As y'all know if you run businesses, you don't turn around a 32-, 33       -million-dollar loss in a five- or sixth-month period."               The system's turnaround plan includes "maximizing efficiencies and cost       savings," renegotiating contracts, cutting spending and working on a plan to       deal with its underfunded pension.               "I am open, and this organization, this board, is open to any solution that       anybody comes up with. I welcome the county help to try to come up with a       solution to salvage the pension plan in a way that allows us to preserve as       much of it as we can, and        also allows the organization to continue forward in a financially viable       state," he said.               The pension, he said, has about $136 million in it but has liabilities of $277       million.               The county Board of Supervisors has asked the hospital Board of Trustees to       resign, but the trustees declined to do that.               "You have a Board of Trustees that some of them have 15-plus years worth of       experience," said Board President Michael Heidelberg. "You look back 15 years       at where our hospital was and we were an average quality public community       hospital. If you look at        where we are today, we have world-class status."               Holland asked the Rotarians to stand behind the system, and call him if they       hear something "that doesn't sound right."               Holland said the state's failure to expand Medicaid, the state-federal program       that pays for medical care for the poor, was part of the problem. Low-incoming       working people, who could have joined Medicaid under the expansion, are among       those who receive        care at the hospital but can't pay their hospital bills. He said 35 percent of       the people who come to Singing River emergency rooms are "unfunded."               Not only problem               "Is that the sole source of our problem?" he said. "Absolutely not. But there       is a big difference now in that states that have chosen to expand Medicaid       across the country under the Affordable Care Act and those who haven't.               "The operating environment in the state of Mississippi for health care       organizations is very challenging and very difficult."               He also said the reimbursement from the government for treating people on       Medicaid and Medicare is shrinking.               "Medicare and Medicaid are breaking the system," he said. "It's very       challenging for the federal government and local government to continue to pay       for a burgeoning amount of health care services."               He said at Singing River, about 60 percent of the hospital's reimbursement       come from Medicaid and Medicare.               "We don't have one bit of say-so in the rates we get paid by the feds for       Medicare services and at the state level for Medicaid services," he said.               Another tax               Hospitals also have been hit with a tax to help pay the cost of Medicaid.               "In 2009, we didn't pay a dime of state Medicaid tax," he said. "Last year,       that was $11.2 million. That's just a straight tax."               That money goes to the state to help it match federal Medicaid funds,               More employers are cutting back on health-care coverage, giving some employees       deductibles they can't afford.               "It's harder for us to collect from individuals than it is to collect from       insurance companies," he said. But, he said, the hospital won't turn away       someone because they can't pay.               Read more here: http://www.sunherald.com/2015/01/14/6017553/holl       nd-singing-river-turnaround.html#storylink=cpy              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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