Louisville Finally Recognizing Religious Restrictions on Healthcare.

“Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” Medicine.

It has taken a while, but finally the traditional press (Courier-Journal and Leo) has picked up on the fact that the merger of Jewish and St. Mary’s Hospital with the St. Joseph Hospital system of Catholic Health Initiatives (to form KentuckyOne Health) has resulted in substantial restrictions on the ability to provide the modern standard of healthcare in Louisville. On June 9, and August 24 I reported in these pages the results of my own investigation. Jewish Hospital and the physician offices owned by KentuckyOne Health were now following the Ethical and Religious Directives Of the Catholic Church (ERD)– this despite the fact that Jewish Hospital had been designated a “legacy” hospital and promises that nothing would change. These were the changes that the University of Louisville Hospital would also have had to follow had the full intended merger been successful. I was writing about about these matters of reproductive health, surgical emergencies, end-of-life care, and falsification in the medical record as early as last December. There should be no surprises here. We know better now. Continue reading “Louisville Finally Recognizing Religious Restrictions on Healthcare.”

Baptist Healthcare Spreads its Wings Statewide.

University of Louisville’s Dream Partner?

A notice in yesterday’s Courier-Journal announced that the Baptist Healthcare System was changing its name to Baptist Health as it acquires the Pattie A. Clay Hospital in Richmond KY. The shorter name is a little punchier and more touchy-feely: this in keeping with the hospital system’s warm and fuzzy marketing themes. Why not?

What I had been overlooking this past year was Baptist’s expansion of influence throughout the state. If all goes as seems planned, Baptist will finalize a full acquisition in October of the Madisonville Regional Medical Center and Trover Clinic, all soon to become Trover Health. This is a prestigious high-quality acquisition for Baptist Health and I congratulate them. Baptist now has mainline hospitals in cities across the entire state including Paducah, Madisonville, Elizabethtown, Louisville, La Grange, Lexington, and Richmond. In fact, I am unaware of any other hospital system in Kentucky so well represented statewide. Continue reading “Baptist Healthcare Spreads its Wings Statewide.”

Unhealthy Food, But Delicious Merger Gossip at the Kentucky State Fair

KentuckyOne Health employee subject to non-disclosure agreement.

I went to the Kentucky State fair last week. I had missed the last two or three years. I like to walk through the various exhibits, see the animals, and get my yearly dose of lamb-sandwich and fried dough. Mostly I like to share the pride of all the people, especially the children, who bring their prized animals and goods to the fair. I go during the daytime, but it must be quite a scene at night. All the food you could eat (but shouldn’t) and all the beer you need to wash it down. I passed on what must have been a delicious doughnut burger. Continue reading “Unhealthy Food, But Delicious Merger Gossip at the Kentucky State Fair”

Secret War Against Birth Control in Louisville Now Out of the Closet.

KentuckyOne Health physicians are now on the record about medical practice restrictions.

On June 9, I reported in these pages that agents for KentuckyOne Health (KOH) were enforcing certain new restrictions on their employed physicians, and in particular, on Obstetricians and Gynecologists. I used these prohibitions to demonstrate how in my opinion University of Louisville physicians and trainees would have had to ignore contemporary standards of the practice of medicine had Catholic Health Initiatives (CHI) been able to acquire the clinical operations of the University. I had, in my opinion, reliable evidence that KOH physicians were being prohibited from offering birth control and other standard reproductive or women’s health services, limited in their treatment of ectopic pregnancy, restricted in end-of-life care, and subject to other of the Ethical and Religious Directives of the Catholic Church. Hypocritical “work-arounds” were suggested that in my opinion opened wide the door to medical falsehood by patients and physicians alike. I could not get a single physician to go on the record to confirm what I was being told privately. Neither could I get a reply from Jewish Hospital or their major women’s health program.

As of today we have a different story. Laura Ungar reported on the front page of Louisville’s Courier-Journal that the physicians of Highlands Family Physicians, a major primary care practice employed by the Jewish Hospital Physicians Group, have severed their association with KOH and joined the physicians of Norton Healthcare where they will be allowed to practice to the full standards of modern scientific, evidence-based medicine and their medical license. The major stumbling block reported was a prohibition against birth control and a required documented emphasis on “natural” family planning (a.k.a. the make-love-and-worry-for-a-month rhythm method, or presumably abstinence). At this time, we do not know the full spectrum of related prohibitions. When the physicians of Highlands Family Medicine requested written direction to dispel confusion about rules that “could change,” none were made available. As a matter of courtesy to those concerned, I again offer to publish any such clarification in these pages. I think the public has a right to know, don’t you? You can download a copy here of the “contractual” restrictions that the University of Louisville would have been only too happy to adopt last January 1. From all that I can see, it appears to me that these are the rules that Jewish Hospital and its physicians are now following. I would be happy to publish a clarification that no physician was ever shown such a list. Continue reading “Secret War Against Birth Control in Louisville Now Out of the Closet.”