Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

HOSPITALS THAT OPENED AS COVID STRUCK FACE CATCH-22 THAT MAY SPELL THEIR DOOM

- BY JAY REEVES

THOMASVILL­E, Ala. — People who live in this town celebrated when, in 2020, early in the coronaviru­s pandemic, Thomasvill­e Regional Medical Center opened.

It offered state-of-the-art medicine previously unavailabl­e in a poor, isolated part of Alabama. The timing seemed perfect: New treatment options would be available in an underserve­d area just as a global health crisis was unfolding.

But that timing could prove to be the new hospital’s undoing.

Deep in the red two years into the pandemic, the 29-bed, $40 million hospital is among three medical centers nationally that say they’re missing out on millions in federal pandemic relief money because they’re so new that they lack full financial statements from before the crisis to prove how much it cost them.

In Thomasvill­e, located in timber country about 95 miles north of the Gulf Coast port of Mobile, hospital officials have worked for over a year to convince federal officials they should have gotten $8.2 million through the CARES Act, not just the $1 million they received. With a total debt of $35 million, the quest gets more urgent each day, said Curtis James, the hospital’s chief executive officer.

“No hospital can sustain itself without getting the CARES Act money that everybody else got,” James said.

In Derby Kansas, south of Wichita, Rock Regional Hospital is due as much as $15.8 million, but, because it opened only in April 2019 and lacks complete pre-pandemic financial statements, it has gotten just a little more than $985,000.

The only thing that’s saved it from financial ruin is the cooperatio­n of doctors, contractor­s and vendors, who haven’t pushed for payments, according to Barry Beus, its chief executive officer. “If we lose them, we lose the hospital,” he said.

In Las Cruces, New Mexico, Three Crosses Regional Hospital opened in 2020 and piled up a staggering $16.8 million in losses in just three quarters while receiving only $28,000 in aid, according to Landon Fulmer, a Washington lobbyist working with all three hospitals to obtain more funding.

Each facility is being penalized for being new even though all provided the same costly COVID-19 care as other medical centers and similarly lost revenue from other procedures, including elective surgeries, Fulmer said.

“It really is quite a strange situation in a way, one that shouldn’t have happened,” he said.

With about 420,000 health care providers nationwide already receiving assistance from a $178 billion pot, the government isn’t covering 100% of losses for anyone, according to Chris Lundquist, a spokesman for the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administra­tion, which oversees the program.

The agency used proxy financial informatio­n for hospitals that opened in 2019 or 2020 to create an equitable payment system, Lundquist said.

“They have all received funding,” he said, and can appeal for more and also can seek a supplement­al appropriat­ion or funding in future years.

Thomasvill­e Mayor Sheldon Day has made several trips to Washington, D.C., to speak with members of the state’s congressio­nal delegation and health officials.

“They’ve been assured they’re going to be taken care of.,” said Dr. Don Williamson, president of the Alabama Hospital Associatio­n. “But the fact is, when you’re dealing with government entities, you don’t have the money until you have the money.”

Thomasvill­e is in southwest Alabama in an impoverish­ed area where 70% of residents qualify for Medicare or Medicaid, and health care has been limited for generation­s.

The last hospital that had been remaining in Thomasvill­e was shut down more than a decade ago.

Officials worked for years to secure a new hospital so people living there wouldn’t have to drive 90 minutes for services commonly available in big urban areas, such as digital imaging, full surgical options, echocardio­grams and 3D mammograph­y.

Under a partnershi­p between the city and a municipal health care authority, Thomasvill­e Regional got federal funding from the Department of Agricultur­e and opened March 3, 2020, before COVID caught fire.

“We thought we were off to a good start,” James said. “And then everything shut down.”

Patients stopped showing up for scans, elective surgeries, mammograph­ies and other moneymakin­g services because of pandemic shutdowns. Within weeks, financial reports that previously looked promising turned dire.

Recognizin­g that new hospitals couldn’t calculate coronaviru­s losses because they had no previous years to compare to, federal officials allowed them to use budgeted numbers rather than prior financial statements.

That’s how the Thomasvill­e hospital determined it was missing out on more than $7 million in aid, James said.

The Birmingham-based Medical Properties Trust recently gave the hospital $2 million, and James said he’s confident Thomasvill­e Regional eventually will get the extra federal aid, “but it will take time.”

 ?? JAY REEVES/AP ?? Thomasvill­e Regional Medical Center in Thomasvill­e, Alabama, is among three hospitals nationally that say they are missing out on federal pandemic relief money because they opened as the COVID-19 crisis began, so they don’t have pre-pandemic financial statements to prove their coronaviru­s-related losses.
JAY REEVES/AP Thomasvill­e Regional Medical Center in Thomasvill­e, Alabama, is among three hospitals nationally that say they are missing out on federal pandemic relief money because they opened as the COVID-19 crisis began, so they don’t have pre-pandemic financial statements to prove their coronaviru­s-related losses.

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