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Health System CEO says pediatric unit is “NOT” closing

June 22nd, 2018 by WCBC Radio

Western Maryland Health System President and CEO Barry Ronan is attempting to clear up what he believes are false rumors that have been circulating about the system’s Pediatric Unit. In his WMHS Blog “The Ronan Report”, he notes that since early June, he has been reading and hearing so much misinformation regarding the WMHS Pediatric Unit.  He emphasizes that the health system is “not abandoning children”  by closing the  Pediatrics Unit.  The term “closing” is a regulatory term that is used as the system begins  transitioning the  unit from virtually a single Pediatric inpatient bed on an adult patient unit to a five bed Pediatric Observation Unit adjacent to the Emergency Department.  Unfortunately, he says, last Saturday’s newspaper headline stated that the unit was closing.  That is not the case.

 

The remainder of the blog is as follows:

 

Beginning in early August 2018, any child requiring an overnight stay will be cared for in a dedicated, secure unit that is being newly constructed next to the ED.  The child can remain in the unit up to 48 hours; after that, clinical decisions will be made as to transfer or discharge to home.  This unit will be staffed by Pediatric Advanced Life Support trained nurses along with Emergency Department physicians and physician assistants.  Pediatricians will continue to attend to children in the unit, as well.  Because we have so few pediatric patients (for the first nine months of the fiscal year, we have admitted 44 children who have stayed an average of 1.93 days), our Pediatric staff nurses cannot maintain their expertise, nor can we recruit dedicated Pediatric nurses because we admit so few children.  The ED staff are very well trained in caring for and treating both adults and children.  In fact, last year we treated close to 9,500 Pediatric patients in the Emergency Department with 86 being admitted to WMHS and about 300 being transferred to a Pediatric Specialty hospital due to their chronic or critical condition.  As a parent and a grandparent, I can’t imagine why a parent or guardian wouldn’t want their very ill child treated in a specialty facility where the specialists treat thousands of children each year. 

 

Some have said just bring the specialists to Cumberland and we do, but caring for children on an outpatient basis usually for chronic or follow up care in Pediatric Cardiology and Neurology.  With a two hour travel distance and so few patients, it is unrealistic to think that specialists would come to Cumberland to perform surgery on one child.  There are physician shortages in virtually every specialty for both adults and children and areas such as ours have the greatest challenges in recruiting.  WMHS like so many other community hospitals have had to resort to alternatives in the care and treatment of children.  We are using more digital technology, telemedicine, and partnerships to address the needs of children and through our affiliation with UPMC, these advancements will continue to grow.  In Maryland, 33 out of the 47 hospitals, have Pediatric Units.  Eighteen of those hospitals have a length of stay for Pediatrics of less than a day and there are nine Maryland hospitals similar to WMHS with a length of stay of less than two days.  Over the last 30 years, Pediatric beds in Maryland have decreased by more than half from 882 to 385.  More and more children are being cared for in the most appropriate location, a specialty hospital, when they have a critical or chronic condition.

 

I certainly recognize the hardship for families who have to travel out of the area if their child is very ill.  Our staff at WMHS will work with the specialty hospital as well as throughout our community to assist with this hardship to the extent possible.  Although such transfers have been occurring for the last several years, we will become more engaged in the process and assist these families in navigating the challenges that they face when such circumstances arise.

 

I hope that the information contained within this blog helps to clarify the circumstances surrounding Pediatrics at WMHS.

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