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MODESTO BEE
ORIGINAL
ARTICLE
By KEN CARLSON
BEE STAFF WRITER
Last Updated: October 21, 2005, 04:29:01 AM PDT
Officials with Doctors Medical Center of Modesto said Thursday they are
considering ways to hold Stanislaus County to its obligation of providing
clinical services for the poor.
Twice this year, the hospital's owner, Tenet Health Corp., has claimed
the county's plan to scale back health services for low-income residents
violates its 1997 contract.
The contract, which runs through 2017, requires the 398-bed hospital
to provide inpatient and emergency services to the county's indigent patients.
The county is obligated to maintain health clinics for low-income residents.
The rift is over the Board of Supervisors' decision Tuesday to cut patient
volumes by 20 percent and close the health services complex on Scenic
Drive in Modesto. The cuts are intended to slash an $8.8 million Health
Services Agency deficit.
At Tuesday's hearing, DMC's chief financial of-ficer, Mike King, and
emergency room physician Robert Donovan said the cutbacks would cause
more people to seek care in the hospital's emergency department, which
they say is stressed to the limit.
King charged that the county is not fulfilling the requirement to maintain
clinics providing the same level of preventive and urgent care as in 1997.
The county's contract with Tenet was part of a deal that closed Stanislaus
Medical Center that year.
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