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Cleveland Clinic To Close Huron Road Hospital

Posted: Mon Jun 06, 2011 2:06 pm
by Bill Call
http://www.cleveland.com/healthfit/inde ... huron.html

Last night someone told me that the Clinic had big plans to expand in Lakewood but that the Lakewood Historical Society's opposition to the demolition of a building caused them to recondisder their commitment to Lakewood.

I'm not buying it.

Must be a story there somewhere.

Does this City control its own destiny?

Re: Cleveland Clinic To Close Huron Road Hospital

Posted: Thu Jun 09, 2011 7:28 am
by Bill Call
Bill Call wrote:Must be a story there somewhere.


I guess not.

Although...

A Clinic representative told me a couple of years ago that their engineers told them the building is unsafe and had to come down. He did not share specific plans with me at the time.

So..

More than one person tells me that the Lakewood Historical Society is holding up a major expansion of Lakewood Hospital and it's not news?

or....

Someone is spreading the rumor that the Clinic won't expand Lakewood Hospital because of the Lakewood Historical Society and it's not news?

Why is the building still standing? Is the Clinic an innocent victim? Is the Historical Society the bad guy? Is the Historical Society the victim? Is the Clinic using the impass as a convenient excuse?

It would seem that a major expansion of Lakewood Hospital would be a good thing for the City. Why the cone of silence?

I think that an election year is a great time to discuss the issues facing the City and the schools. However, I'm finding out in my lonely campaign for School Board that I'm the only one that thinks so.

Re: Cleveland Clinic To Close Huron Road Hospital

Posted: Thu Jun 09, 2011 7:38 am
by Jim O'Bryan
Bill Call wrote:
Bill Call wrote:Must be a story there somewhere.


I guess not.

Although...

A Clinic representative told me a couple of years ago that their engineers told them the building is unsafe and had to come down. He did not share specific plans with me at the time.

So..

More than one person tells me that the Lakewood Historical Society is holding up a major expansion of Lakewood Hospital and it's not news?

or....

Someone is spreading the rumor that the Clinic won't expand Lakewood Hospital because of the Lakewood Historical Society and it's not news?

Why is the building still standing? Is the Clinic an innocent victim? Is the Historical Society the bad guy? Is the Historical Society the victim? Is the Clinic using the impass as a convenient excuse?

It would seem that a major expansion of Lakewood Hospital would be a good thing for the City. Why the cone of silence?

I think that an election year is a great time to discuss the issues facing the City and the schools. However, I'm finding out in my lonely campaign for School Board that I'm the only one that thinks so.



Bill

I cannot answer any of your statements from unnamed sources.

However Toby Cosgrove had a meeting with Clinic personal and spoke of massive cuts
in employees, benefits, perks, and spending.

This is in the upcoming Collinwood Observer...

HURON HOSPITAL TO END OPERATIONS WITHIN 90 DAYS;
CLEVELAND CLINIC TO OPEN NEW OUTPATIENT COMMUNITY
HEALTH CENTER OCT. 3

Monday, June 6, 2011, Cleveland: Cleveland Clinic’s Board of Directors announced today that it will end operations at Huron Hospital within 90 days. After an extensive evaluation of data and ongoing efforts to preserve the hospital, a special committee of Cleveland Clinic’s Board of Directors and hospital leadership concluded that Huron Hospital is not sustainable for a long-term future. Cleveland Clinic will continue to provide outpatient care at the hospital until the new Cleveland Clinic Huron Community Health Center opens Oct. 3 on the hospital’s campus. This center is better designed to meet the community’s changing health needs. Cleveland Clinic will offer round-trip transportation services from the Huron campus to Cleveland Clinic’s main campus, as well as Euclid, South Pointe and Hillcrest hospitals. Cleveland Clinic will also provide ongoing communication to patients, and hold community information meetings on access to care in the future.

As one of Cleveland’s first hospitals, Huron Hospital has a 137-year history of serving patients, educating physicians and driving innovation. Over the years, however, many factors negatively impacted this once-thriving hospital, including a steady decline in patient use, a rapidly shrinking population, costly maintenance of the hospital’s aging facilities, and substantial fixed costs that were much higher than the hospital could maintain. “This is a difficult day for Cleveland Clinic, but we are firmly

The new Cleveland Clinic Huron Community Health Center will continue Huron Hospital’s dedication to preventive care and chronic disease management, which is a critical need in East Cleveland and its surrounding area. Due to Huron Hospital’s successful chronic disease management practices, 37 percent of all hospitalized patients in 2009 had a first or secondary diagnosis of diabetes, down from a high of 57 percent five years earlier. It is one of 30 hospitals in the nation to receive certification from The Joint Commission as an inpatient diabetes center.

“Through better management of chronic disease and less dependence on emergency care and hospital stays, the East Cleveland community now has a greater need for a health center than a hospital. Today, healthcare is delivered largely on an outpatient basis. A community of this size – located within three miles of two major hospitals – can no longer sustain, nor is there a need for, its own hospital,” said Gus Kious, M.D., President of Huron Hospital. “I have been humbled by the talented and caring group of individuals who have dedicated their careers to the residents of East Cleveland and the patients of Huron Hospital.”

Cleveland Clinic is putting several initiatives into place:

• Care will continue for East Cleveland and surrounding communities. Outpatient
care will be offered at the new Cleveland Clinic Huron Community Health
Center, which opens Oct. 3. For specialty care or hospitalization, patients are
welcome at Cleveland Clinic’s main campus, as well as Euclid, South Pointe
and Hillcrest hospitals or elsewhere within the Cleveland Clinic health system.

• Cleveland Clinic will provide direct, round-trip shuttle service from the Huron
campus to main campus, Euclid, South Pointe and Hillcrest hospitals after the
hospital closes.

• Patients will get the care they need in the Cleveland Clinic health system and
return to the Huron Community Health Center for continual care and follow-up
close to home, which is made possible through a unified electronic medical
record and care coordination in the Patient Navigation office.

• Huron Hospital has approximately 850 employees and Cleveland Clinic plans
to actively recruit them and offer job opportunities for everyone who wants to
stay within the health system.

By working with colleagues in the Northern Ohio Trauma System (NOTS), the City of East Cleveland and the City of Cleveland Emergency Medical System (EMS), trauma care has been regionalized and is coordinated by


“Huron Hospital has given a diverse group of physicians, nurses and employees the opportunity to do great things, and what we’ve accomplished for a socioeconomically challenged patient population will be carried on,” Dr. Kious said. “The dedication of our
people has never wavered, but we can no longer stand up against external forces that will begin to challenge our ability to provide quality care.” Some of the key factors that led to the board’s decision:

• Only 17 percent of patients from Huron Hospital’s primary market went to Huron for key inpatient services, including heart care, oncology and pulmonology, in the first half of 2010. The vast majority of patients (83 percent) are already choosing other hospitals, with the largest number (35 percent) going elsewhere in the Cleveland Clinic health system. Further, only 38 percent of East Cleveland patients use Huron Hospital for inpatient services. Declining patient volume creates potential challenges to maintaining quality and patient safety.

• There’s been a 10 percent decrease in discharges since 2003, and a 16 percent decrease in surgical procedures. Huron Hospital currently has less than 100 patients a day and less than 60 percent of the 185 staffed beds are occupied. The decline has accelerated this year with some units closed temporarily; on some days the hospital has held as few as 47 inpatients.

• The population in East Cleveland has declined 34 percent (from 27,217 to 17,843
residents) since 2000, according to the 2010 U.S. Census.

• Huron Hospital’s facilities are aging and have required extensive resources over the years. The hospital has sustained continued financial losses and Cleveland Clinic anticipates losses at the new facility, as well.

Cleveland Clinic officials plan to reach out to City of East Cleveland officials in the near future to discuss transitional issues and to determine the future use of the property.

Cleveland's Huron Road Hospital was founded in 1856 and incorporated in 1874. It became a founding member of the Meridia Health System in 1984. In 1997, the Meridia Health System became part of the Cleveland Clinic health system. Among its many accomplishments, Huron Hospital was the first community hospital in the Cleveland Clinic health system to fully implement electronic medical records. Huron Hospital has been recognized by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for success in saving lives by increasing organ donation rates. Cleveland Clinic is Northeast Ohio’s largest employer supporting more than 58,000

Cleveland Clinic spurred nearly $10.5 billion of the total economic activity in Ohio in
2009. Its community benefit contribution in 2010 totaled $537.4 million, including $149.8
million in charity care.

Huron Hospital patients can get more information at 216-761-2955. Information also is
available at www.huronhospital.

.

Re: Cleveland Clinic To Close Huron Road Hospital

Posted: Thu Jun 09, 2011 9:25 am
by Michael Loje
Bill, you seem to be confusing the Historical Society with something that has real power. Remember the Hall House across the street from the Y? That was one of the most historic buildings in Lakewood. If you've noticed, its been an empty lot for three years.

Re: Cleveland Clinic To Close Huron Road Hospital

Posted: Thu Jun 09, 2011 10:05 am
by Michael Loje
Bill, these kind of stories pop up all the time. There is even one now about B F Goodrich/Cleveland Pneumatic. According to some, the "real" reason the plant is closing is that the city wont let them alter the appearance of the building by making additions. Anytime you hear something like this, its usually hogwash.

Re: Cleveland Clinic To Close Huron Road Hospital

Posted: Thu Jun 09, 2011 1:50 pm
by Bill Call
Michael Loje wrote:Bill, you seem to be confusing the Historical Society with something that has real power. Remember the Hall House across the street from the Y? That was one of the most historic buildings in Lakewood. If you've noticed, its been an empty lot for three years.



The owner of the Hall House made the decision to fight.

The other half of this story is that the Clinic made the decision to not fight, to leave the building as is and change its expansion plans.

Michael Loje wrote:Bill, these kind of stories pop up all the time. There is even one now about B F Goodrich/Cleveland Pneumatic. According to some, the "real" reason the plant is closing is that the city wont let them alter the appearance of the building by making additions. Anytime you hear something like this, its usually hogwash.


American Greetings didn't move because of an income tax hike. It moved because it wanted a taxpayer subsidized building in a trendier setting.

All I know for sure is that I was told by a Clinic representative that the building in question was unsafe and needed to be torn down and its still there.

If anyone from the Historical Society is out there they are free to post that the Historical Society has no interest in the building, doesn't care if it is torn down and has no objection to the Clinic doing what it wants with the building site and never expressed any opposition to its demolition.

Re: Cleveland Clinic To Close Huron Road Hospital

Posted: Thu Jun 09, 2011 2:16 pm
by Rhonda loje
Bill, you first have to find out what building you are talking about.

Re: Cleveland Clinic To Close Huron Road Hospital

Posted: Thu Jun 09, 2011 2:53 pm
by Rhonda loje
This is from mike loje

Bill,regarding the hall house, this is what happened. A decendent of the hall family was going to move the house at his own expense. He was going to fill in the hole and leave it a clean, empty lot. The owner, instead, razed the house the day after Christmas. Bill, I ask you, what was there to fight?