New York Post

Budget plan allows ‘doc’-tired mishaps

- By CARL CAMPANILE ccampanile@nypost.com

Gov. Cuomo’s budget plan scraps rigorous state audits of hospitals that help make sure resident doctor-interns aren’t severely overworked and exhausted on the job — and critics worry that could imperil patient safety.

The audits — conducted by an independen­t contractor hired by the state — enforce the Libby Zion Law, named after the 18year-old daughter of the late New York Times writer Sydney Zion, who died from botched care at a Manhattan hospital in 1984.

The law requires that doctorinte­rns at 100 teaching hospitals work no more than 80 hours per week or 24 consecutiv­e hours. Facilities hit with violations get slapped with financial penalties.

But Cuomo’s $68 billion spending plan would eliminate the audits — considered the nation’s most stringent because the law allows for surprise inspection­s and reviews of payroll data.

Hospital officials instead would be allowed to make an “attestatio­n” — to self-certify that they are abiding by the workinghou­r requiremen­ts, according to a budget memo explaining the proposed change.

Eliminatio­n of the audits “does not prohibit” the state from performing “targeted investigat­ions” of hospitals if needed, officials said. But the head-scratching move set off alarm bells among patient-safety advocates.

One lawmaker said the pro- posal — which would save $1.1 million — is a gift to the politicall­y influentia­l hospital industry, plain and simple.

“The hospital industry has never liked the Health Department looking over their shoulder,” said Assembly Health Committee Chairman Richard Gottfried, who is fighting to get the audit funds restored.

“You wouldn’t want doctors working on patients who can’t stand up and think, let alone perform medical tasks,” he said.

The Committee of Interns and Residents, the union representi­ng the doctor-trainees, also opposed the move as anti-worker and anti-patient safety.

“Neither patients nor physicians benefit from having residents work over 80 hours per week or more than 24 consecutiv­e hours,” said CIR president Eve Kellner. “Representa­tives should fully enforce our state’s accountabi­lity structures to make sure that there are no more violations of these common- sense regulation­s that protect both physicians and patients.”

The most recent report of audits found the rate of violations of the working rules at New York’s medical teaching hospitals ranged from 13 percent to 25 percent, with the largest hospitals with the most medical interns having the highest rate of violations, according to analysis of data by CIR. A breakdown by hospital was not immediatel­y available.

The Cuomo administra­tion defended the proposal.

“The audit requiremen­t is duplicativ­e to the process already in place nation-wide, including in New York, which ensures hospitals comply with mandatory limitation­s on residents’ work hours,” said Health Department spokesman Jonah Bruno. “The proposal would not change those limits on working hours.”

He repeated that department reserves the right to launch targeted inspection­s “if necessary.”

As expected, the lobbying group representi­ng New York City’s hospitals applauded the change.

“New York’s hospitals are deeply committed to complying with resident work-hour rules, but the State’s on-site oversight program is disruptive to teaching hospital staff and accomplish­es no useful purpose,” said Brian Conway, spokesman for Greater New York Hospital Associatio­n.

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