Dayton Daily News

Good Sam closing its doors for last time

Loss of hospital will mean big adjustment for local community.

- By Kaitlin Schroeder Staff Writer

For the past 90 years, Good Samaritan Hospital has been the site of countless births, deaths, surgeries, career starts, profession­al milestones and medical innovation­s.

On Thursday, the hospital will close its emergency room at noon and at 12:01 a.m. on July 23, Good Sam will close for good.

The initial announceme­nt in January about the hospital closing was met with shock, anger and heartbreak over the future loss of an institutio­n that for so long has been an anchor in Dayton and played an important role in the life moments of area residents.

The planned closure also raised

concerns over what it will mean for the economy and access to health services for the 38,600 people — 75 percent of them African American — for whom Good Samaritan is the closest hospital.

Leaders at Premier Health, which owns the hospital, have said the difficult decision to close Good Samaritan was necessary after it became unsustaina­ble to operate two hospitals five miles apart as Dayton population and the need for hospital admissions declines.

Premier, with $1.7 billion in revenue last year, is one of the largest companies in the region and operates Atrium Medical Center, Upper Valley Medical Center and Miami Valley Hospital, along with a network of satellite hospital locations and physician practices.

The doctors, nurses and other members of the Good Samaritan staff — some who have worked for decades at the hospital — have already started transition­ing to new jobs throughout the health system and major medical services are shifting to other Premier sites as well.

Job offers

Premier Health leaders had said during the initial closing announceme­nt that they planned to offer other positions to all of the 1,600 employees who worked at the northwest Dayton hospital campus.

Barbara Johnson, Premier Health chief human resources officer, said as the closing date nears, the Dayton-based health network anticipate­s that everyone who sought to remain with Premier will be offered a job at another location.

As of last week, Premier Health had made about 1,400 job offers to Good Samaritan employees and about 1,200 people have accepted positions so far.

“It’s important, being the largest private employer in Dayton, that we were really able to make this commitment,” Johnson said. She said the health system is still recruiting for other positions on top of the positions filled by Premier employees.

Amid a shortage of nurses and physicians, competitio­n for health care workers has intensifie­d and other health care employers saw an opportunit­y to recruit in the wake of the closure announceme­nt. Grandview Medical Center, operated down the road by competitor Kettering Health Network, reported it hired about 100 from Good Samaritan.

“We understood there were going to be all sorts of attempts to recruit our staff, not only locally but also regionally and nationally. And we knew it was going to be emotional for employees and some might self select out,” Johnson said.

One of the challenges to retention is morale. John- son said Premier held town hall meetings right after the announceme­nt so employees could get their questions answered, created a weekly (sometimes daily) newsletter and had management around to answer questions and manage the rumor mill.

“We made sure we eliminated any rumors that may have surfaced so employees got accurate, timely informatio­n,” Johnson said.

Johnson said they wanted employees to have options for the type of job they preferred and employees filled out preference sheets on their first, second and third choices on where they would like to be placed.

Transporta­tion to hospitals

A civil rights complaint filed by a group of west Dayton clergy over the closure has listed concerns about transporta­tion and how the closure will affect the surroundin­g population, which is both dispropor- tionately low income and African-American.

Johnson said Premier Health is giving financial help through its foundation­s to some employees who worked at Good Samaritan and are transferri­ng jobs.

“Our foundation­s are offer- ing up financial assistance to anyone who might have transporta­tion needs for as long as the employees needs it for their new work loca- tion,” she said.

Greater Dayton Regional Transit Authority did outreach at Premier locations primarily for their employees since many of them walked or rode the bus to Good Samaritan, said Jessica Olsen, RTA communicat­ions manager.

Premier’s other major locations, such as Miami Valley Hospital, already have bus stops, so she said their work in response to the hospital closing wasn’t about mak- ing new routes so much as it was about helping workers learn what stops and routes are available.

“We had three or four employee outreach programs directly on the Good Samaritan campus in order to make sure they are ready for the transfer,” Olsen said.

Work requiremen­ts

Loren Anthes, who researches Ohio Medicaid for Cleveland-based Centers for Community Solutions, said in the wake of Good Samaritan closing down, a larger health access issue at play is the state government’s effort to add work requiremen­ts for those covered by Medicaid expansion.

The federal government is still considerin­g whether to grant permission for Ohio Medicaid to create the requiremen­ts. The state contends 95 percent would be exempt and an even smaller percentage would eventu- ally lose coverage, though Anthes argues that number will likely be higher if the changes work like SNAP work requiremen­ts, which pushed a higher percent than expected off coverage. In respect to the closing of Good Samaritan, Anthes noted that for those without easy transporta­tion access, if they have Medicaid then their plan can cover transporta­tion to their doctor or hospital. But if new restrictio­ns make it harder to maintain insurance coverage and at the same time jobs that could satisfy the new rules move out of easy travel distance, that could jeopardize health care access for some. “Being uninsured is much more predictive of your ability to address your health care than whether or not there’s a large hospital within a couple miles,” Anthes said.

Emergency situations

Ambulance routes will also have to change after the hospital closes, though several fire chiefs said they will learn more about what the change will specifical­ly mean for run times after the hospital closes.

Trotwood Fire Chief Rick Rick Haacke said about 50 percent of the patients the department transports go to Good Samaritan and the other half go elsewhere.

“The one nice thing is we have Miami Valley North — Good Sam North — right in our backyard,” Haacke said, in reference to the Engle- wood satellite campus of the hospital that will transfer to Miami Valley’s license after Good Sam closes.

Haacke said his staff takes patients to the hospital they want to go to, so if they need a larger hospital they can go to Grandview or Miami Valley Hospital in Dayton.

He said Miami Valley is farther enough down the road from Good Samaritan where it could noticeably change their run times and the time it takes to get back in service, and they will learn more in the coming months about what specific difference it makes. Harrison Twp. Administra­tor Kristofer McClintick also said that the township’s fire department is also evaluating what difference it will make routing transporta­tion to other locations.

“We’ll assess that as the year goes on,” he said.

Emergency care access has been one of the key con- cerns of a group of clergy that filed a federal civil rights complaint over the closing of Good Samaritan.

With the closing a week away, the complaint has not been assigned a case worker yet by U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

On Fr i day, Rev. Rock- ney Carter of Zion Baptist Church, who is part of the group, said the clergy are meeting with their legal team to file a possible civil case seeking to fight the closure of Good Samaritan.

What’s next

McClintick also sits on the advisory board for what happens next at the hospital site and surroundin­g area. Premier Health plans to tear down the hospital and turn it into a “shovel ready” site for redevelopm­ent. The plan- ning process, dubbed Phoe- nix Next, has been led by a planning firm called Planning Next. Premier has pledged $10 million toward its future redevelopm­ent.

McClintick said the board is planning the next phase of what will happen and not just looking at the hospital site but at surroundin­g neigh- borhoods. The next public meeting about the planning process will be in August.

Premier leaders have said the Good Samaritan closure was a difficult but necessary decision.

When the funds were

being raised in 1928 to build Good Samaritan Hospital, there was a series of articles sounding the alarm about a critical shortage of hospital beds in the city. Now the demand for Dayton hospital beds has plummeted while population has shifted to the suburbs and medical advancemen­ts have let multiday hospital stays become outpatient procedures. As the population shrinks and opportunit­y dwindles, the remaining residents are primarily covered by Medicaid and Medicare, which reimburse hospitals less for services than private insurance. Scott McGohan, CEO of McGohan Brabender, the largest local employee benefits firm, said he thinks the community should look at what economic factors contribute­d to the closing of Good Sam and find ways to support Grandview to prevent it from also struggling for long-term viability. “As we look at the population in our county and access to health care, my gut tells me that a lot of people who were using Good Sam are going to start using Grandview. Because of Mediciad reimbursem­ent and Medicare reimbursem­ent potentiall­y, we are going to roll those problems over,” he said.

Grandview Medical Center leaders said the hospital is here to stay and they are prepared to take on more patients as the neighborin­g hospital closes.

The hospital is in the final stages of a $25 million expansion of its ER and also is adding more cardiology services and parking.

“We’ve seen a slight increase in charity care, but that’s our mission,” said Becky Lewis, president of Grandview. “That’s why we’re here.”

‘As we look at the population in our county and access to health care, my gut tells me that a lot of people who were using Good Sam are going to start using Grandview.’ Scott McGohan CEO of McGohan Brabender

 ?? DAYTON DAILY NEWS ARCHIVE ?? Members of the class of 1938 celebrate graduating as registered nurses from Good Samaritan Hospital.
DAYTON DAILY NEWS ARCHIVE Members of the class of 1938 celebrate graduating as registered nurses from Good Samaritan Hospital.
 ?? JIM OTTE / STAFF ?? About 1,600 people worked at Good Samaritan Hospital in northwest Dayton. As of last week, Premier Health has made about 1,400 job offers to those employees, and so far, 1,200 have been accepted.
JIM OTTE / STAFF About 1,600 people worked at Good Samaritan Hospital in northwest Dayton. As of last week, Premier Health has made about 1,400 job offers to those employees, and so far, 1,200 have been accepted.

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