More problems at the county hospital

December 29, 2014

Our thanks to one of our readers who sent information about this article in El Diario de El Paso.  You may want to use Google translate if your Spanish isn’t good enough to read it.

According to the article Medicare will penalize our county hospital one percent of their reimbursements next year because of what Medicare has classified as “preventable errors”.  The penalties evidently started three months ago on October 1, 2014 and were for problems that were observed before then.

One cannot help but wonder if our hospital administrator told his board about the medical problems before he got his bonus.

The hospital was found deficient in three different areas including avoidable infections and surgical complications.  With 10 being the worst score that is assigned,  our county hospital received a 10 in all three areas.  If a hospital receives a score of 7 or higher the law requires that the penalties be assessed.

In our case that will evidently amount to about $350,000.

In Denial

The article went on to say (using Google’s translation service) that according to the head of the hospital’s quality control  effort “patients should not be concerned about these scores as only 18 patients from a total of 33, 598 experienced serious medical complications.”  Further from the article “He explained that the figure presented by avoidable errors is less than one percent, making clear that UMC continues to literally committed to providing quality health care.”

Don’t worry.  We know what we are doing.  Those people over at Medicare don’t know how to run a hospital like we do.

I suspect that the hospital’s response will be to point out the tuberculosis problem that another local hospital had last year as if two wrongs make a right.  At least in the TB situation the hospital addressed the problem aggressively and did not tell us that they only hurt a few people.

We deserve better

Brutus

 

 


Which time?

December 28, 2014

The advent of the electronic version of the El Paso Times has validated  the old maxim “don’t believe everything that you read”.

In the past when paper was the only way to read their stories if a mistake was made the Times would sometimes print a clarification or retraction in a subsequent edition.

With the electronic versions they seem to feel free to change their stories at will with no notification to their readers that an earlier version has been changed.

The story of the boy scout land lease the other day is an example.  The original version of the story looked like this on the electronic version:

boyscoutsi35

The article went on with this quote “It will be used as one of the largest urban Boy Scout camps in the United States, transportation commission Chairman Ted Houghton said earlier this week.”

Talk about an understatement

With the land bordered by Paisano drive and Interstate 35 this will be one large campground.

Later in the day a visit to the same web site provided this snapshot:

boyscouts10

The mistake in the earlier version is not what bothers me.  It is that the Times feels no need to let it’s readers know that they published something that was wrong and then provide the correct information.

How can we trust what they print?

We deserve better

Brutus


Chamber’s latest

December 27, 2014

I got a copy of the 2015 issue of Livability:  Greater El Paso, Tx in the mail yesterday.

The magazine is sponsored by the Greater El Paso Chamber of Commerce.  The wrapper it was in had this statement:  “We are pleased to provide this complimentary copy of our primary fulfillment piece for newcomer/relocation information requests.”  At last a chance to see how the chamber helps promote new business.

The cover featured a handsome picture taken from the inside of our new ball park.

Some of the facets of our community that the magazine featured were:

“Exciting new projects are under way in El Paso’s downtown, which already serves as the epicenter of its art and entertainment scene, with a new ballpark, theaters, museums, main library and arts organization offices.”

They wrote about our All-America City Award in 2010 and about El Paso being the nation’s safest large city four years running.

Our 300-plus days of sunshine were mentioned.

Wonderful voters

“The $74 million ballpark is part of a $473 million quality-of-life bond measure that local voters overwhelmingly approved in 2012” according the magazine.  Most of us missed that election.

Public schools

“Three public school districts serve the El Paso region.”  They mentioned the El Paso, Socorro, and Ysleta districts.  Maybe the chamber considers the Canutillo district to be outside of our region.

Well developed

The “Business Spotlight” featured Jordan Foster Construction, Texas Gas Service, River Oaks Properties, Mimco Inc. and Hunt Companies Inc.

My favorite quote was “From an economic development standpoint, people look for predictable operating environments…And that is what we offer in El Paso”.

No kidding.

We deserve better

Brutus


Pro con website

December 26, 2014

I stumbled upon this web site the other day http://www.procon.org/

Actually I was listening to NPR.

From the site:

Our mission:

Promoting critical thinking, education, and informed citizenship by presenting controversial issues in a straightforward, nonpartisan, primarily pro-con format.

ProCon.org is a nonpartisan, 501(c)(3) nonprofit public charity

I have not spent a great deal of time on the site but so far it appears to me that they do what they say.
Brutus

Merry Christmas

December 24, 2014

May we all enjoy the holiday while remembering those less fortunate than us.

We’ll be back on the 26th.

Brutus