The troubles continue. The hospital regained notoriety after a patient who was left to writhe in pain on the Emergency Department floor eventually died. As the Los Angeles Times recapped the story (re-ordered to make it chronological),
[Edith Isabel] Rodriguez a California native, was poor and uninsured. She reportedly had a history of narcotics use and lived with various relatives.
A security videotape showing the woman writhing for 45 minutes on the floor of the emergency room lobby....
[In response to] 911 calls from Rodriguez's boyfriend and a female bystander. One dispatcher curtly told the bystander that the situation was not an emergency; the other said there was nothing she could do because Rodriguez was already in a hospital.
[A] video show[ed]... her extended time on the floor and a janitor cleaning around her.
She died of a perforated bowel, which probably developed in the last 24 hours of her life, according to a coroner's report.
Meanwhile, the Times also reported that
In new signs of turmoil at Martin Luther King Jr.-Harbor Hospital, officials said Tuesday the chief medical officer had been replaced and more than 40% of licensed vocational nurses and nursing assistants recently failed initial skills tests.
The disclosures came as the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, grappling with federal findings that the hospital continues to endanger patients, bluntly discussed preparations for possible closure of the public facility.
The people more directly involved in the case of Ms Rodriguez were treated more leniently, also according to the Times,
Six staff members at Martin Luther King Jr.-Harbor Hospital — including a nurse and two nursing assistants — saw or walked past a dying woman writhing on the floor of the emergency room lobby last month but did not help her, according to a report made public Friday.
Their discipline: a letter outlining how they should behave in the future.
The six are in addition to two others whose roles have already been made public by The Times: a contract janitor who cleaned the floor around the woman as she vomited blood and a triage nurse who oversaw the whole episode and pointedly refused requests to intervene.
The janitor was counseled verbally; the triage nurse was placed on leave and later resigned, the report said.
What we said last year about what was then King-Drew still seems relevant. A few lessons from this sorry story: in health care, it is often the whole institution and its most vulnerable constituencies that suffer for the mistakes made by top managers; and that bad managers can hide for a long time behind institutions that enjoy a favorable reputation. And to make an addendum, although we have been writing a lot lately about the shenanigans of pharmaceutical management, mismanagement, conflicts of interest, and corruption seem to afflict the leadership of all kinds of health care organization.
ADDENDUM (21 June, 2007) - See this post on The Health Care blog on King-Harbor's plight.
Harbor Hospital is a county hospital, which receives $200 million of its $400 million operating budget from the federal government. They have received five warnings over the past four years that federal funding would be pulled if they didn't get their act together. Taxpayer dollars even paid for $17 million in consulting fees to attempt to get this death trap to perform, but even then it failed.
ReplyDeleteCould it be that this government-funded and run hospital is a prime example of what our entire health care system would be like if we were to go with Universal Health Care? I tend to think so.
Michael Moore did not tell his movie goers that Harbor Hospital is actually a government funded hospital. He should have presented the "full" truth. Given this hospital's sad history of neglecting the most vulnerable it is my hope it will be closed.
ReplyDelete