The massive redevelopment of Suffolk Downs straddling East Boston and Revere has its first retailer: an outpost of Danvers’ Twisted Fate Brewing.
Twisted Fate will open a small brewery in Amaya, the apartment building that began moving in its…
Your Hometown Radio
by
The massive redevelopment of Suffolk Downs straddling East Boston and Revere has its first retailer: an outpost of Danvers’ Twisted Fate Brewing.
Twisted Fate will open a small brewery in Amaya, the apartment building that began moving in its…
by
An ambulance siren on Tuesday morning pierced the quiet scene near Carney Hospital in Boston’s Dorchester neighborhood, but the vehicle didn’t stop at the shuttered facility that’s now devoid of emergency signs or even signs bearing its name.
Large blue boards outside Carney that previously identified the hospital and its bankrupt owner, Steward Health Care, are now blank.
At entryways, multilingual posters now alert unsuspecting patients seeking care that the hospital is closed — and that the nearest hospital is 2.1 miles away in Milton. The signs say to call 911 for emergencies, and an ambulance is temporarily stationed outside Carney to help ease the transition and make necessary transports to nearby facilities.
One hospital wing door toward the rear of the building was blocked by an orange barrier and a bench.
Most of the visible activity at Carney was happening at the back of the hospital, where Seton Medical Building — which includes physician offices — remains open. Willard Maitland, who had just visited his primary care doctor at the medical building, said he was heading to Milton for blood work since Carney is no longer an option.
Maitland, who’s lived in Dorchester almost 30 years, said he’s never been to another emergency room. He’s had three surgeries at Carney. His wife and four children have also relied on Carney, Maitland said.
“Driving to Milton isn’t that bad, but I’ve never been there before. That will be the closest, apart from Boston Medical Center, but this is the closest one,” Maitland, 67, said as he gestured toward Carney. “I don’t know about the next generation, but I think it should be here for people like me — old people who don’t want to be too far from the hospital.”
Maitland said it takes him less than 10 minutes to drive to Carney.
“Ten minutes can save a life,” Maitland said, as he indicated traveling to other hospitals could take more than double or triple the time.
The ripple effects of Carney shutting its doors — one of two Steward hospitals to close in Massachusetts Saturday — remain to be seen in Milton.
“Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital-Milton is deeply committed to providing care in our community including to patients impacted by the closure of Carney Hospital,” Rich Fernandez, president of BID Milton, said in a statement. “We have taken steps to prepare for any potential increase in volume and our priority is ensuring uninterrupted care for any patients in need. While we have experienced a typical volume of patients over the weekend, we are closely monitoring the situation as it evolves.”
At Codman Square Health Center in Dorchester, located less than a mile away from Carney, health care providers are bracing for an influx of patients, including those seeking emergency care.
Have a tip for the NBC10 Investigators? Email us at tips@nbcboston.com.
Dr. Guy Fish, the center’s CEO, said Codman’s urgent care clinic logged a 40% spike in patients last Tuesday and Wednesday — before Carney even closed. The clinic typically sees 60 to 75 patients per day, but that volume is now pushing 100, Fish said.
“We have not had, to date, any meaningful support from the government agencies, whether that’s DPH or EOHHS. We would certainly welcome support,” Fish said. “What we’re anticipating is a surge in demand for services, which could be anywhere from 30 to 50, to who knows, 70% greater than what we normally see.”
Fish said Codman needs financial assistance to hire more workers to keep up with patient demand, and higher reimbursement rates.
Codman is also expecting to see and triage patients who would have previously gone to Carney for acute medical emergencies, including for respiratory distress, chest pain, strokes, gunshot wounds and stabbings, Fish said.
“Let me be very frank: The sudden absence of ER level 4 and level 5 services means that people will die,” Fish said. “Some percentage of those who could have been saved because of the ability to get timely care close by, some percentage of those will die because the time it takes to get through Boston traffic to other centers will be greater than the time that they have to have life-sustaining care delivered. That is the tragedy of the response to the Steward hospital implosion and the Carney hospital closure.”
As Kimberly, who asked to be identified by her first name for privacy reasons, exited the Seton building after an eye doctor’s appointment, she repeatedly called the Carney closure a “waste.” Now in her 50s, Kimberly said she’s been coming to Carney since she was 15 years old.
“All this money this state has, they didn’t do anything,” she said. “This could have been a cancer center. This could have been a drug rehab. This could have been so much more than what they did.”
Gov. Maura Healey has said the state couldn’t intervene since Carney did not receive qualified bids. The administration is working to seize land at another Steward hospital, St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center in Brighton, through eminent domain, and other Steward facilities in Massachusetts are being transferred this month to new owners.
In front of Carney Tuesday morning, there was some muted activity in the parking lot, as people — including health care workers wearing scrubs — carried boxes to their cars. They declined to speak to the News Service. A security worker overseeing one of the entrances said that St. Elizabeth’s personnel were taking away some equipment from Carney, while Department of Public Health officials were expected to come and take away medical records.
Diny Charlemagne, who attempted to visit Carney for a medical exam and to fill out immigration paperwork, was shocked when he learned about the hospital’s fate.
“I didn’t know it was closed,” Charlemagne said, before asking the News Service when Carney would reopen. Informed of the permanent closure, he responded, “Oh, wow.”
An ambulance posted outside Carney, provided by Beauport Ambulance Service that serves the North Shore and Boston, has been outside the hospital 24/7, ready to transfer other unaware patients who thought they could remain in Dorchester for emergency care.
There have been six to 12 transports each day from Carney, ranging from “minor illnesses” to “pretty acute” cases, said Eric Beaulieu, Beauport’s general manager. The Healey administration said Friday that ambulance service would be provided outside Carney and Nashoba Valley Medical Center in Ayer for one week following their closures.
“If the need is still there, we might extend it depending on operational needs,” Beaulieu said. “Basically for us, we want to be there for the community, for the City of Boston.”
Raymonde Alexandre, who’s had several surgeries at Carney, said closing the hospital is “not a good idea.”
“Because in this neighborhood, we need a hospital,” Alexandre, a longtime Dorchester resident, said as she left Codman Square Health Center Tuesday afternoon. Reflecting on her care at Carney, she added, “They’ve been very good for me.”
Oliver Clarke said he’s visited Carney, about a 20-minute walk from home, hundreds of times for his medical issues. The closure is “really messed up” and “very inconvenient,” he said.
“That hospital saved my life a few times because I’m on blood thinner,” said Clarke, who was sitting around the corner from Codman. “I am kind of upset about it. I have thought about it and said if anything happened to me, Carney’s not up there no more.”
In a Dorchester Reporter column, Bill Walczak, the former head of Codman and Carney, said Monday that the local health care system lacks the capacity to fill the void left by the closed hospital.
“This is a disaster,” Walczak wrote Tuesday. “Secretary Walsh and Commissioner Goldstein should never have allowed the hospitals to close.”
“We were told there was no money to maintain services at the Carney, despite $8 billion in the state’s ‘rainy day fund,’ and a recent $600+ million settlement with the tobacco industry,” he continued. “We were told that the state didn’t want to get into the business of running a hospital, when, in fact, it currently runs four hospitals. Kate and Robbie have gotten their way, and the Carney is now closed, leaving many residents and patients without health care recourse.”
by
A corrections officer is facing charges after allegedly raping an inmate in Framingham, Massachusetts.
The Middlesex County District Attorney’s Office said Wednesday that 49-year-old Joao Gomes of Pawtucket, Rhode Island, had been indict…
by
A Haitian migrant is accused of sexually assaulting a child in Mansfield, Massachusetts, federal officials confirmed Wednesday.
Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Boston said they arrested 18-year-old Akim Marc Desire in Attleboro on Aug…
by
A U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge approved the sale of six Steward Health Care hospitals here Wednesday, though he left some of the exact details of the deals to be resolved before the end of the month.
Judge Christopher Lopez made the decision after hearing arguments Wednesday morning, including around an objection that key lenders to the bankrupt company filed to the proposed sales. The judge said he would approve the sales, though he wanted Steward and the lenders to iron out differences around how a certain $17 million in proceeds is divvied up.
“This sale needs to happen, and it will happen,” Lopez said from the bench in Houston, Texas. He added, “What I am saying is you’re going to be authorized to sell it, but I’m going to withhold $17 million bucks, which is the short funding shortfall.”
The judge said his decision to hold aside some of the sale proceeds to still be allocated “should not hold up these sales” and that he would have a ruling well before the targeted transaction close date of Sept. 30.
Approved was Steward’s plan to sell St. Anne’s Hospital in Fall River and Morton Hospital in Taunton to Lifespan for $175 million; the Holy Family Hospital facilities in Methuen and Haverhill to Lawrence General Hospital for $28 million, and Good Samaritan Medical Center and St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center to Boston Medical Center for as much as $140 million. Steward closed its other two hospitals here, Carney Hospital in Dorchester and Nashoba Valley Medical Center in Ayer, on Saturday.
Wednesday’s hearing got into the meat of an objection filed by the “first in, last out” or FILO lenders that have pumped hundreds of millions of dollars into Steward as the company headed for bankruptcy. Those lenders said they “cannot possibly consent to the proposed sales of the Massachusetts Hospitals in their current form, and they do not.” It was their arguments that swayed Lopez to require a resolution of the $17 million issue.
“The Debtors’ sale process has resulted in bids for the Massachusetts Hospitals for an aggregate purchase price of $343 million, subject to certain adjustments … However, this figure is misleading as the entirety of the Purchase Price will be allocated towards the real property and therefore flow to benefit the purported landlord (MPT and Macquarie) and more specifically will flow to the purported landlord’s secured lender,” the FILO lenders wrote in the objection.
by
Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey has named a new leader for the embattled Massachusetts State Police.
She has selected retired Lieutenant Colonel Geoffrey D. Noble of the New Jersey State Police as the next colonel of the Massachusetts State Po…
WPKZ 105.3FM/1280AM
762 Water Street | Fitchburg, MA 01275 | 978.343.3766
EEO | FCC Quarterly Report | Contest Rules
© 2019 WPKZ | Website Development: Insight Dezign