South County Hospital is an independently-run health care facility.
South County Hospital is an independently-run health care facility.
The Public’s Radio

Community Renews Calls for Change of Leadership at South County Hospital

As South County Hospital continues to lose money and clinicians, a group of doctors, donors, community members, and former trustees say the hospital should hire a new CEO and pursue a long-term affiliation with a larger health system

As South County Hospital continues to lose money and clinicians, a group of doctors, donors, community members, and former trustees say the hospital should hire a new CEO and pursue a long-term affiliation with a larger health system

Share
South County Hospital is an independently-run health care facility.
South County Hospital is an independently-run health care facility.
The Public’s Radio
Community Renews Calls for Change of Leadership at South County Hospital
Copy

Interview highlights

On the request to replace South County Health CEO Aaron Robinson

Steven Fera:
He’s made some management decisions that have not involved collaboration with health care workers, physicians, nurses, or community members.

Some of those decisions involved the loss of most of our primary care providers in Washington County. So there’s one provider left at (the) Westerly office, none in the South Kingstown/Narragansett office on Woodruff. The three out of four cancer specialists have resigned along with several staff members and a nurse practitioner.

We had trouble because we were growing and we needed more resources, and we appealed to the current administration on multiple occasions that we needed more staff, more technicians to be able to deliver appropriate care to our patients and timely care. We were basically told to make do with what we had.

On how the Board of Trustees responded to the letter

Fera: I don’t think they reacted appropriately. The board essentially has ignored the letter. Joe Matthews, the chairman of the board, said that they would not change anything in verbal communication to the group that conceived the letter. I think everyone is very frustrated that the board has not taken action.

Initially, we felt the CEO needed to be replaced, perhaps the chairman of the board who is not taking action. Now it’s clear that a good segment of the Board of Trustees has kind of shirked their fiscal and moral responsibilities in taking action. They can no longer say they’re not informed of the problems.

On what will happen if things don’t improve at the hospital

Fera: I think eventually the quality has to be impacted. I think people are going to find that out. They’re going to experience a different standard of care than they’ve had all along. They’re going to do things like some have already done, which is go to Westerly Hospital and experience a much better experience.

It pains me to hear when patients have said, “You know, I went to Westerly and it’s really nice there. It’s just like South County Hospital used to be.” I mean, that’s a stake in my heart, for someone who developed a program there. If you lose a provider, the patients go elsewhere. They may follow their provider to Warwick or wherever the provider is. … If the doctors leave, the hospital at some point is not going to be sustainable and provide the care it does now.

This interview was conducted by The Public’s Radio. You can listen to the full interview here.

Public health leader Amy Nunn talks about the ripple effects of federal policy shifts, the threat of SNAP cuts and rising insurance costs, and what Rhode Island can do to protect community health in the months ahead
Attorney General Peter Neronha is negotiating with Prospect Medical to keep the financially troubled hospitals open through the end of the year while a potential buyer works to finalize financing — or another steps in
Ørsted executives say they are ‘committed’ to finishing project despite financial headwinds
But D.C. federal judge’s ruling Tuesday means a major setback to the already struggling project
Reluctance to label hazing incident as antisemitism, all caps flyer, provokes outrage at public hearing
Most incumbents held their seats in Tuesday’s election, while two newcomers — Scott Pemberton and James Roy — won spots on the City Council amid low voter turnout