
A state board on Tuesday unanimously rejected a plan to close Mercy Hospital in the Bronzeville neighborhood.
The Illinois Health Facilities and Services Review Board voted 6-0 after about four hours of testimony Tuesday from dozens of community members, activists, doctors and nurses – all of whom called for the board to reject Trinity Health request.
“While we are disappointed with the initial decision by the Illinois Health Facilities and Services Review Board, we remain committed to our transformation plans,” Trinity Health said Tuesday. “We will look forward to going before the board again in early 2021 with our plans to discontinue inpatient services at Mercy Hospital and transition to an outpatient model to serve residents on the South Side of Chicago.”
Board member Dr. Stacy Grundy agreed with Trinity Health executives, who said Tuesday that the state is in dire need of regional planning for health care, but said: “I have major concerns that this new mode and the closing of Mercy will exacerbate health care access barriers.”
Dr. Linda Murray, another board member, said, “I do not believe Mercy has made a reasonable case that their services will not have an extremely negative impact on the South Side of Chicago. … As a public health person, I am really distressed that this is going on in the midst of a global pandemic.”
Betty Chang, a first-year medical student, accused Trinity Health of “pulling the rug out from under” the feet of the African American and Latino people that Mercy mostly serves.
“Please, please, please reconsider the closure of Mercy. These communities need your help, and they deserve to survive,” Chang said.
Christina Govas, another medical student, said a decision by the board to close the hospital means “you will have indirectly signed death certificates for patients needing immediate attention.”
“It means you have robbed them of a chance to recover, to wake up, to breathe …,” Govas said.
Former Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn was among those blasting Trinity for closing during a pandemic, calling it “preposterous.”
“This is corporate medicine at its worst,” Quinn said.
Several speakers claimed there are ready and willing buyers for the hospital campus.
John Capasso, a Trinity Health executive vice president, said the company hired a broker in 2018 to solicit requests for proposals from multiple Chicago-area hospitals.
“We did go through an exhaustive process, but there was no interest at all,” he said.
Capasso later added other groups had been in contact with Trinity Health but either didn’t have the funding or expertise to run a hospital.
In late July, Mercy announced it would close sometime between Feb. 1 and May 31, 2021.
Trinity Health said it plans to set up an outpatient facility about two miles from Mercy Hospital, with a focus on diagnostic testing and preventive medicine.
Capasso pitched the Mercy outpatient center as the only viable way forward for a hospital that is losing money and losing outpatient clients to bigger institutions in the city.
“Failure to acknowledge the realities of today will mean that the residents of the South Side of Chicago will continue to suffer gross health care inequities,” he said.
He also said Trinity Health has proposed a “sliding timeline” to allow Mercy to close in a “safe and organized manner” and one that accounts for the pandemic.
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December 16, 2020 at 03:02AM
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Mercy Hospital closure proposal rejected by state board - Chicago Sun-Times
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