In the News
As published as an Op Ed in The Hartford Courant, March 19, 2008.
New UConn Hospital? Or No UConn Hospital?
By Myron Genel
After extensive study, the Connecticut Academy of Science and
Engineering released its report to the General Assembly and its
recommendations regarding the proposed enlarged replacement for the
John Dempsey Hospital at the University of Connecticut Health Care
Center in Farmington.
UConn's proposed 352-bed replacement hospital plan was evaluated
against the projected statewide need for hospital beds, along with
the effect of additional beds at Dempsey on regional hospitals. The
committee concluded that, from UConn's perspective, a replacement of
the size proposed — or even larger — had considerable merit and
could enhance the health center's physical integration of the three
pillars of academic medicine: education, research and patient care.
However, the committee was also conscious of the fragile status
of health care delivery nationally and in the Greater Hartford
region, where hospitals are struggling with inadequate
reimbursement, especially from public programs such as Medicaid. The
addition of 128 acute-care beds — absent demonstrated need, at least
until 2020 — would likely destabilize health care in the region.
Also, even a larger Dempsey hospital would not sufficiently
provide a well-rounded clinical education for the university's
current class of 80 medical students, not to mention expansion by 10
percent to 20 percent, as is taking place in medical schools across
the nation in response to projected physician shortages.
The committee concluded that the status quo was unacceptable. The
present 224-bed hospital is too small, and extensive expenditures to
revitalize the facility for hospital use cannot be justified. Yet
the need to address the inadequacy of the current facility presents
an opportunity for the health center and interested regional
hospitals to develop a regional academic medical education network
that ultimately could enhance health care in the region and
throughout the state.
Thus the committee recommends that discussions between the health
center and regional hospitals, already under way, should be
intensified with the goal of developing strong academic clinical
partnerships. This should be carefully monitored by the legislature
through appointment of an independent monitor to ensure that the
best interests of the state are considered.
These discussions should include closing Dempsey and renovating
the vacated space to support the health center's teaching and
research. The committee felt, however, there was value in
maintaining some mixture of inpatient and/or ambulatory patient care
facilities at the health center, but these could be built and
operated by a primary clinical partner selected through the
affiliation process.
The mixture of inpatient and ambulatory facilities could be
determined by careful study of the health care environment and
mutual needs of the health center and the selected clinical partner,
but in any event these would not be state-operated facilities.
Significantly, this solution removes the health center as a
direct competitor with its valuable teaching hospital partners, and
provides an environment for enhanced cooperation and collaboration.
The committee recommends an accelerated timeline to develop a
common vision and set of guiding principles for establishing
sustainable affiliation agreements between the health center and
regional hospital partners. To some extent this already exists in
pediatrics, through health center's close affiliation with the
Connecticut Children's Medical Center. A six-month process would
follow, during which the health center and identified clinical
partners would define the explicit affiliation relationships, with
specific attention to shared governance and financial arrangements.
Since the formation of the health center more than 40 years ago,
the relationships envisioned by the committee have not emerged. The
committee was mindful of this history, but its recommendations
reflect a vision that there exists a unique opportunity to build on
the health center's innovative common science curriculum for dental
and medical students and to create new, interdisciplinary models of
health care education that reflect the current health care delivery
system.
If this can be accomplished, the health center and the Greater
Hartford region can be at the cutting edge of training for the next
generation of health care professionals.
Visit the academy's website at:
www.ctcase.org
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