Sentinel & Enterprise

Regional meetings on Steward impacts will be closed

- By Sam Drysdale

Gov. Maura Healey’s administra­tion will begin holding closed meetings with local health care leaders this week to prepare for uncertaint­y around patient care as Steward Health Care buckles under financial pressure and could possibly pull out the state.

The Department of Public Health, Massachuse­tts Health and Hospital Associatio­n and the Massachuse­tts League of Community Health Centers will hold the private virtual meetings in each region where Steward Health Care operates facilities, according to a DPH official.

The health system has eight hospitals currently operating in Massachuse­tts, but as financial woes troubling the for-profit system have come to light and politician­s have accused Steward operators of failing to disclose financial informatio­n to state regulators, the company is looking to sell its physician network.

The first forum will be held Thursday, April 18 where the department will provide an update about preparatio­ns for various transition scenarios, the DPH official said. The initial meetings will focus on access and care for patients, but are not intended to discuss the potential acquisitio­n of any Steward facility or specific financial support for individual health care providers.

In addition to hospitals and community health centers, the department invited Tara Gregorio from the Mass Senior Care Associatio­n and Amy Rosenthal from Health Care for All to represent the voices of patients, the DPH official said.

The meeting will focus on medical and surgery services, maternity and emergency services in each region, and how to preserve access to care if a Steward hospital closes. Future forums will discuss behavioral health, work

force planning and academic programs and clinical rotations.

DPH Commission­er Robert Goldstein called the meetings “part of our ongoing response to Steward Health Care and the evolving health care capacity needs across the state. At these meetings, we will provide updates about the work that the state is doing, answer questions and hear concerns from participan­ts, and strategize about how we can work together to meet the needs of patients and providers.”

Steward is the third-largest physician contractin­g network in Massachuse­tts, behind Mass General Brigham and Beth Israel Lahey Health, according to the Health Policy Commission.

 ?? STUART CAHILL — BOSTON HERALD, FILE ?? Holy Family Hospital in Methuen is one of nine hospitals in the state run by Steward Health Care, a company that Gov. Maura Healey has said should sell its operations and get out of Massachuse­tts.
STUART CAHILL — BOSTON HERALD, FILE Holy Family Hospital in Methuen is one of nine hospitals in the state run by Steward Health Care, a company that Gov. Maura Healey has said should sell its operations and get out of Massachuse­tts.

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