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Time to take strong action on the hospital

Anyone who has lived in the region serviced by Sharon Hospital in northern Litchfield County, Conn., and eastern Dutchess County, N.Y., for any length of time knows how critical it is in times of need. Every family has those times, whether it is for the emergency department when children need broken bones set, or the labor and delivery unit when a mother is giving birth, or the intensive care unit when an older generation is struggling with compounding serious health issues.

The way that Nuvance has handled the strategy for the hospital, however, since it became a nonprofit owned by them, would make it seem they have no awareness of the need for such care. Why would that be? Is it simply disregard for a rural area that has less population than the more densely inhabited areas served by their hospitals in other parts of Connecticut and New York? Or is it just more of the nationwide trend toward disrespecting rural areas and cutting back services for them as common policy?

See the story "State begins investigation of Nuvance; doctors speak out" by Executive Editor Cynthia Hochswender for in-depth coverage of the position Sharon Hospital is being put in by Nuvance. She has multiple doctors on the record about the duplicity of the hospital’s ownership in pushing ahead with changes that have not been approved by the state of Connecticut. Accordingly, the state has launched an investigation into Nuvance’s actions. But what are the repercussions for Nuvance for such actions? Have they weighed the possible outcomes and decided it might be worth it to pay the state fines rather than keep the services in place they had promised to do in their original 2018 agreement?

The concerns of the physicians interviewed by Hochswender are the same as those we all see in the planning for the hospital. As services diminish, the experience of those who enter the hospital in times of emergency and crisis will also diminish correspondingly. Those medical professionals who are still at Sharon Hospital will surely do their level best to care for those who seek their help, as they do now. That, however, will become more and more difficult as their numbers decrease and their tools to do their jobs are taken away. The failure of the hospital will become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

There are opinions on the actions by Nuvance in this week’s Opinion section from readers who represent the citizen’s group Save Sharon Hospital, which has been working tirelessly to advocate for the integrity of the hospital and the need in the community for its services. Read Hochswender’s front page article as well as the commentary on these pages, and bring yourself up to date on the situation as it is at this moment when it comes to the health of our community hospital.

Then act yourself if you see the urgency in this trajectory toward minimum care at Sharon Hospital. Take the steps suggested in his letter to the editor by Victor Germack, and email the state Office of Health Strategy at ohs@ct.gov and contact the area’s elected representatives to strongly oppose such cuts in service. 


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