Hospital
District:
“The
same care my Golder Retriever gets.”
Medical
care on Vashon-Maury Islands is not what it used to be.
We
used to have a few doctors here, plus the clinic up on the hill at Paradise
Ridge. If your kid, or you, fell and broke a bone, you could have it x-rayed
and put in a cast here on the island.
No
more.
I
recently sat down with Annie Miksch, who is one of the members of the
Vashon-Maury Health Collaborative. This is a group of people that has been
working for five years trying to answer the question, “How do we get and keep a
stable health care presence on Vashon/Maury Islands?”
They
have been having public meetings about health care on the island, at one of
which a gentleman got up and said that he’d like to get “The same care my
Golder Retriever gets.”
The
point being, animals on this island have easier access to health care than
people do at present.
In
the past, Miksch said, “All we had to offer was, ‘come out here and lose
money,’” when the island tried to lure providers to the island. “The providers
wanted $1 million up front, plus $500,000 against their losses their first
year. We could not offer that.”
“If
a Hospital District passes, we’ll have money that can talk,” Miksch told me.
“With a Hospital District the island could raise enough money to subsidize on-island health care. Whatever
comes, it has to serve all of us, from the homeless on the island to the
wealthiest.”
So
what is a Hospital District? It does not mean we’ll have a hospital.
It
is a taxing district, same as a Fire Department taxing district, or Parks
taxing district, or School taxing district.
It
is run by a board of commissioners elected by us. The commissioners are people
who represent us, and have business, medical, and community knowledge. They
would have public meetings, and answer to the public.
The
commissioners would set the tax rates, and yes, our property taxes would go up.
Can we afford that?
Can
we afford having no urgent medical care for human beings on the island?
Why
do we need a Hospital District? Glib answer: so we can have care as good as our
animals have.
If
you’ve been paying attention, you know that the clinic on the hill has been a
revolving door as various providers have passed through.
Primary
care clinics and urgent care clinics do not make enough money to pay their own
way. They need a population of 25,000 to 35,000 to draw on, and Vashon/Maury
has fewer than 11,000 people on a good day. Beyond that, clinics make money
from their affiliations with specialists, surgeons, and hospitals, Miksch told
me.
“We’re
too small, we’re too rich*, and we’re too close to major health care,” Miksch
said.
Swedish
Hospital, for example, is only twelve miles away. That’s only a short drive,
right?
The
original clinic lost money, and Granny’s Attic was established to make up for
the shortfall. It wasn’t enough. Highline came in.
Highline
lost money, and Franciscan took over Highline.
Franciscan
failed to calculate that most islanders went to hospitals and specialists in
Seattle, not Tacoma, where most of their hospital and specialist connections
were, so they lost money. Bye, bye, Franciscan.
For
a time, the clinic was closed, and no provider
would come to the island. If you needed a doctor, you had to go to the
mainland, or call 911.
Neighborcare
was willing to come to the island when no one else would. Yay, Neighborcare!
However,
Neighborcare has limitations.
They
cannot do urgent care. We can go to a hospital ER, or, those of us who go to
Seattle know there is now a Franciscan urgent care clinic on Fauntleroy in West
Seattle. These options require a trip off the island. Not everyone is able to
drive themselves off the island or afford the ferry fare to get back. Not
everyone is able to drive.
The
Neighborcare clinic tends to be overwhelmed and understaffed. It can take a
long time – weeks – to schedule an appointment at the clinic. You might be able
to get a walk-in appointment, or you might be told they’re not doing walk-ins
that day.
Neighborcare
has established a school medical clinic here funded through Best Starts for Kids, and that
clinic is a success, but at the main clinic they are losing money and they
can’t keep that up forever.
When
Miksch says, “losing money,” she is talking about $350,000 to $400,000 a year.
One
of the major contributing factors to this loss is that both private medical
insurers and Medicare do not reimburse medical costs with as large a percentage of the fee as
they did in years past. Ironically, if most patients were on Medicaid,
Neighborcare would receive higher reimbursements for their charges, but many islanders have private
insurance. (*That’s the “We’re too rich,” part)
A
Hospital District levy is not on the ballot yet. To get it on the ballot this November, many people will
have to sign petitions asking to put it on the ballot. You will soon see
petitions around the island – it is up to you to decide if you are going to
sign a petition.
Once it is on the ballot, assuming enough
signatures are obtained, at least 40% of the people who voted in the last
election must vote on the issue to validate the election, and of those, 50% +1
must vote to pass it.
For some reason the island had a big turnout
for the 2018 election, so if you are in favor of a Hospital District, you need
to get out and vote for it.
The
ballot would ask: Shall we have a public Hospital District? And: Who shall be
the commissioners? Meaning, the commissioners would be elected at the same time
the Hospital District is formed.
A
Hospital District would mean that a health care provider at the clinic would to
some extent answer to us, instead of the other way around, because we would be
able to keep them afloat financially.
Meanwhile,
we can drive to Seattle or Tacoma or call 911 if we must.
Vashon
is not alone in the dwindling of medical care in rural communities. Forming a Hospital
District will give us some traction to get stable medical care here.
When
a Hospital District was put to the vote twelve years ago, it sank like a stone,
because it did not benefit enough people. People did not want to have their
property taxes raised for something that would not benefit them.
That
has changed. Now a Hospital District has the potential to benefit most, if not
all, of us on the island.