Hospital wants city’s blessings
Barbara Diamond
South Coast Medical Center will most probably move out of Laguna
Beach, but hospital officials want to leave with the city’s
blessings, or at least without bad feelings.
“We need to involve the community that founded us,” said Joe
Orsak, president of the hospital’s fund-raising foundation. “We want
the city to understand our dilemma.”
Hospital officials said Monday that they don’t have the $72
million to retrofit the campus to meet a state mandate on earthquake
safety standards and to upgrade existing buildings. They said that
even if the medical center did have the money, the campus would have
the same limitations that have put the hospital in a financially
precarious position: primarily, not enough patients and doctors and
not enough clout with managed care organizations.
“If we had the money, we would rather put it into new programs and
state-of-the art equipment,” Orsak said.
“The bottom line is we don’t have the $72 million, and if we did,
it doesn’t pencil out.”
A new hospital in a different location is estimated to cost $110
million and be 10 years down the road. Hospital officials are seeking
a five-year extension of the 2008 deadline for the mandatory
retrofit. If denied, the hospital would face the expense of the
retrofit as well as the cost of the new facility, should the decision
be made to move.
“Without the extension, we either do the retrofit, close down or
refuse to do it and see what happens,” Orsak said. “Doing nothing
would be morally and politically questionable. We would at least have
to start.
“Legally, we would only be obligated to spend the $52 million, but
as a practical matter we should do the whole project at one time,” he
said.
The extension to 2013 would allow the hospital more time to
explore its options, Orsak said.
“In four or five years, who knows what earthquake technology will
be available and at what cost?”
It is also about the period of time estimated for the construction
of a new hospital.
Mayor Toni Iseman said it would as unacceptable for the hospital
to move as it would be to have development in Laguna Canyon.
“I do not think the council would ever support a move,” she said.
“Too many creative, talented successful people who live in and
love Laguna know how much the hospital means to this community. It
would be like an amputation.”
Options outlined Monday by hospital officials were:
* Rebuilding and retrofitting the hospital.
The pros outnumber the cons, according to a presentation by Gary
Irish, hospital chief executive officer. However, the pros are not
all that swell, including two that seem to fit better on the con side
of the ledger: The hospital would continue to lose a market share of
acute care and have to develop new sub-acute care programs to draw
patients.
* Converting the hospital to a non-acute care facility.
Services would shift to behavioral health, which officials said
would be detrimental to medical and surgical physicians, who would no
longer be able to use the hospital for in-patient medical and
surgical care.
The proposed cancer center could stay, whether or not the hospital
moves, officials said.
“The center was intended to be a specialty that would draw
patients from outside HMOs and from outside out market area,” Irish
said.
* Turn the existing campus into a satellite campus for a new acute
care facility -- an emergency, medical and surgical care hospital
located elsewhere.
The award-winning emergency department would be reduced to an
urgent care facility if the hospital moved because patients could not
be transferred to beds for follow-up care.
* Close the existing hospital and build a new one to the south
east of the present campus.
The cons presented by Irish include a $120-million expenditure,
Laguna residents’ concerns about health care and the general
difficulty of change.
Building from scratch would allow the center to take advantage of
modern hospital design that improves efficiency and includes retail
space for restaurants, pharmacies and Starbucks, etc., Irish said.
The pros, he said, are increased market share and growth
potential, increased leverage with insurance companies, better
design, and better access for San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano and
Dana Point patients.
“It takes 100,000 exclusive people and about 300,000 in a broader
community to support a hospital,” Irish said. “South Coast Medical
Center had 84,000 visits in 2002, about 16,000 by Laguna Beach
residents.”
The SCMC board is considering all its options, Irish said.
Hospital executives are trying to arrange meetings with the City
Council and South Laguna Civic Assn. to explain their problems.
“We want them to tell us what we can do to help,” Councilwoman
Cheryl Kinsman said. “We want them to stay, and we will do whatever
we can to make that happen.”
Irish said no formal decision has been made -- formal being the
operative word. Officials give little hope of keeping the existing
hospital in Laguna. Moving out has been under in-house discussion for
more than a year.
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