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Group Plans Surgery Facility

Critics fear that a small specialized hospital in Loma Linda would draw only wealthy patients.

The Region

April 26, 2004|Hugo Martin, Times Staff Writer

A group of doctors and investors has submitted plans to build a $40-million surgical hospital in Loma Linda, a project criticized by those who fear it would draw well-insured patients away from community hospitals.

The 66,000-square-foot, 28-bed hospital proposed on vacant land midway between Loma Linda University Medical Center and Redlands Community Hospital would be called California Heart & Surgical Hospital and would specialize in surgical services, including cardiovascular and orthopedic operations, and recovery care.


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Backers describe it as a new kind of hospital that would offer specialized services and a high level of personal care in a small-hospital setting.

"We are not trying to be rebels," said Allen Gustafson, an orthopedic surgeon from the university medical center who is spearheading the private venture. "We are trying something new. This can be a model for the whole country."

But hospital groups, including the California Health Care Assn. and the Hospital Assn. of Southern California, say the proposed facility would be a specialty hospital -- one of a growing number in the nation -- designed to cherry-pick well-insured patients needing expensive procedures, leaving neighboring hospitals to serve the poor and uninsured.

"They are not serving the community," Jan Emerson, a spokeswoman for the California Health Care Assn., which represents about 500 hospitals statewide, said about the proposed hospital. "They are there to serve a segment of the community that will make their investors wealthy."

The number of specialty hospitals in the country jumped from 29 in 1990 to 92 in 2003, according to a government study. Most of these hospitals specialize in cardiac, orthopedic, surgical and women's services -- among the most expensive procedures offered by hospitals, according to the study.

Concerned that specialty hospitals are drawing well-insured patients away from community hospitals, Congress included an 18-month moratorium on them in last year's Medicare bill to give officials time to study the issue. Critics have complained that doctors who invest in specialty hospitals can refer wealthy patients who need expensive procedures to the specialty hospitals.

During the moratorium, which runs through June 2005, doctors are forbidden to bill Medicare or Medicaid for services performed at specialty hospitals that are wholly or partly owned by physicians.

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