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Healthcare Crisis in Los...
Healthcare Crisis in Los Angeles
The New York Times
June 5, 2008
A City Where Hospitals Are as Ill as the
Patients
By Jennifer Steinhauer
For thousands of residents of South Los Angeles
who had depended on the large county-run
King-Harbor hospital, the past 10 months have
been a grueling exercise in cobbling together
medical care. When King-Harbor was shut by
federal officials, it became the 15th general
acute care hospital to close in Los Angeles
County since 2000, about half of which served
residents in South Los Angeles.
The loss of King-Harbor was less a seminal
moment than another episode in the continuing
health care ordeal among this city's sickest
and poorest residents.
South Los Angeles is one of the most difficult
places in the nation to both receive and give
medical care. Family doctors are few and far
between, and the area is one of the hardest to
draw new doctors to, physician recruiters say.
The vast majority of residents in central Los
Angeles are uninsured or are on the state's
Medicaid program — known as Medical — which
offers the lowest reimbursement rates in the
nation, and a growing population of illegal
immigrants who are not eligible for government
insurance have flooded the ranks of the
uninsured.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, has
proposed another 10 percent cut in the state's
Medicaid program to balance the state's budget
while Congress contemplates a host of
reductions to the program that, if approved,
would mean $240 million less for Los Angeles.
From 2000 to 2006, the number of
Medicaid-covered patients using the South Los
Angeles hospitals on Medicaid increased 18
percent and the uninsured ranks rose more than
20 percent, while patients with commercial
coverage fell 20 percent, according to the
hospital association's figures.
As a result, many hospitals in the South Los
Angeles area are unable to stay afloat, and
centers that once served 100,000 patients here
have closed.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/05/us/05southla.html
Comment: There are a great many problems that
must be addressed if we are to ensure that
people in underserved regions, such as South
Los Angeles, have access to adequate health
care services. But there is one absolutely
essential resource that must be available to
establish the necessary health care
infrastructure: money.
When government budgets are perceived to be
tight, where do our elected officials turn to
try to reduce spending? Amongst the more
vulnerable sections of budgets are the various
health programs for low-income individuals - a
sector of our society with only a feeble
political voice. Reform proposals that would
build on our current fragmented system of
financing health care would continue to
perpetuate this chronic underfunding stemming
from the acquiescent anti-welfare mentality of
those participating in the budget process.
Without adequate funding, health care will not
be provided. The first step is to make sure
that the money is there. A single payer
national health program would do precisely
that. All facilities and services would be
fully funded. More work certainly would have to
be done, but the financial barrier would have
been removed.
There is reason for pessimism. A tour of the
medical facilities in South Los Angeles is
confirmation that, whatever makes America
great, it is not our social solidarity. Maybe
we need to start a campaign against
acquiescence. Then maybe we'll find the spark
needed to ignite our social solidarity.
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