New Mexico AG Probes Patient Care at Private Equity-Run Hospital

The days of altruistic medical care may have never truly existed, however, what may have been a sense of selflessness in healthcare has been apparently fading into the shadows as the corporate juggernaut of private equity awakens.

Increasingly, hospitals fall under the ownership of profit-driven behemoths and the space between patient health and the bottom line has grown thin.

This from usnewsmag.com.

This is why the news of the New Mexico Attorney General’s investigation into Memorial Medical Center is crucial storytelling that commands public attention.

For beneath the sterile, antiseptic walls of these once-hallowed institutions lies a spider’s web of deceit, placing the most vulnerable among us at the mercy of merciless financial engineering.

The Memorial Medical Center in Las Cruces, New Mexico, stands at the epicenter of this investigation, a for-profit institution managed by Lifepoint Health and owned by Apollo Global Management—a private equity firm.

The Attorney General’s office alleges that this institution has systematically denied life-saving cancer treatments to patients who are unable to pay.

Such callous disregard for human life “is both morally odious and legally actionable under New Mexico’s consumer protection laws.”

Every patient is deserving of the highest quality of care, including those in rural and underserved communities. Senator Whitehouse and I are taking a close look at how shifts in ownership may impact hospitals’ care. We’re fighting to ensure the medical system operates with positive patient outcomes at top of mind.

Testaments to the indignities heaped upon the sick echo across the state, marking a stark failure of the medical system to meet its most basic covenant with the public: to care for those in need.

It’s a very clear sign they don’t care about the community.

To wit:

– Barbara Quarrell, a former nurse at Memorial and lifelong Las Cruces resident, shared her chilling experience of being denied cancer treatment due to insurance issues and

– Debbie Jo Minser, a breast cancer patient, was abruptly refused a follow-up appointment upon being told her Medicaid had ended.

Memorial’s management has countered these accusations with feeble denials, claiming they provide adequate care and offer financial assistance to eligible patients. However, beneath the surface of PR-speak lies a more sinister reality.

Lifepoint Health and Apollo Global Management have made multiple profit-driven decisions, such as limiting staff, selling real estate, and leveraging debt to bolster their financial standing. This flagrant prioritization of profit over people constitutes a gross breach of public trust.

The role of private equity in healthcare across the United States is a story of financial coercion, debt manipulation, and ruthless cost-cutting. Studies have irrefutably linked:

– [H]igher costs for patients, and

– [L]ower standards of care to the penetration of private equity into the healthcare sector.

It is a twisted scenario where patients are reduced to mere revenue streams, while hospitals are transformed into financial instruments serving the interests of their corporate overlords.

The New Mexico Attorney General’s investigation marks a crucial step towards rectifying this crisis of humanity in healthcare.

This much-needed probe seeks to create transparency and accountability in a system that has lost its very purpose.

By scrutinizing billing practices and alleged denials of care, it is a stand against the corporate culture that values profits more than people. Patient advocates welcome this long-overdue move, hoping for a seismic shift in the priorities of healthcare providers.

We are committed to facilitating access to care and will fully cooperate with the inquiry.

This story transcends state lines and hospital walls, serving as a stark reminder that the private equity apparatus has its tentacles deep within the very fabric of American healthcare. As the AG’s office delves deeper, it must not only investigate Memorial Medical Center but also address the broader disease afflicting the industry.

We must call for:

– [J]oint liability,

– [S]tricter regulation, and

– [G]reater transparency.

The time is upon us to reclaim healthcare as a right rather than a luxury.

As the investigation unwinds, we must remain vigilant, for the delicate balance between patient care and profit margins hangs precariously. It is our collective responsibility to ensure that healthcare stands strong as a cornerstone of compassion rather than a mere conduit for financial gain. The fragile beauties of human life must not be sacrificed on the altar of corporate greed.

This is the largest hospital in the area:

We cannot allow for barriers to care:

Final thoughts: We the People were told Obamacare would address this, right? Fat chance.

No, healthcare is not a right and healthcare providers must be reimbursed for services rendered, however, is turning people away, denying medical care to those who cannot pay the answer?