Tag: Fairfield Memorial Hospital

  • FMH Board hit with federal lawsuit

    Former Employee Claims Sexual Harassment

    WINNSBORO – A previously dismissed lawsuit alleging sexual harassment at Fairfield Memorial Hospital is once again active.

    On Dec. 28, an attorney for Tabitha Williams, a former employee of the hospital, refiled the suit in circuit court. It was removed to federal court on Jan. 22.

    In May 2017 it had been dismissed without prejudice, which allows plaintiffs to refile an identical lawsuit at a later date, according to the U.S. Judicial Department website.

    Williams is seeking damages for back and front pay, embarrassment and humiliation, punitive damages, legal fees and other unspecified damages, according to the litigation. No court date has been set.

    “He (the employee) began a period of inappropriate and aggressive communications with Plaintiff in and out of the work place,” the suit states. “Plaintiff is informed and believes that her termination resulted from her refusal to engage in sexual activity with Defendant.”

    The federal court database had the listed case’s disposition as “settled,” though no details of any settlement were ever released. Fairfield Memorial Hospital and the employee, individually, are named as codefendants in the litigation.

    Columbia attorney Jeff Goodwyn, who’s representing Williams, couldn’t be reached for comment.

    Charles Thompson, who is listed in court papers as an attorney for the defendants, also couldn’t be reached.

    In a response filed prior to dismissal, the hospital said the plaintiff was dismissed for poor job performance and attendance issues.

    The hospital also said the plaintiff refused to cooperate in an investigation into her complaint, court records state.

    Initially filed Feb. 22 in Kershaw County Circuit Court, the suit says Williams, a former certified nursing assistant, was harassed by a human resources employee.

    The lawsuit said the employee made several unwanted sexual comments beginning in October 2016.

    Calling the employee a “sexual predator,” the lawsuit states the unwanted advances came during conversations at work, on the phone and via text message.

    Williams further says the employee tried to “lure Plaintiff” into a sexual relationship, which she declined. Williams said the employee fired her the following August, “ostensibly for reasons related to job performance,” the suit continues.

  • Providence Health-Fairfield ER opens

    After a grand opening for the community (above) on Dec. 13, the new Providence Health-Fairfield Emergency Room on Tuesday.

    WINNSBORO – As the baton passed from Fairfield Memorial Hospital (FMH) to Providence Health-Fairfield Emergency Room on Tuesday, citizens in Fairfield County were not without health care service for a minute. As FMH officially closed its doors forever, the county’s new ER opened its doors the same day to a new world of state-of-the-art emergency health care for Fairfield County.

    The opening of Providence Health’s emergency room comes after almost three years of planning and cooperation between the FMH board and administration, Fairfield County administrative staff and Providence Health and legislative intervention from the county’s former State Sen. Creighton Coleman and former State Rep. MaryGail Douglas.

    And there could be more good news to come as the FMH board continues to market (through ROI Commercial out of Columbia) the available 25-bed hospital building for another health care entity.

    The new ER facility, located across from Bi-Lo, near the intersection of US 321 and Highway 34, includes 12,000-square-feet for emergency services, featuring six exam rooms (including four treatment rooms and two for future expansion), two trauma rooms, an onsite laboratory, imaging services such as computerized tomography (CT) scan, ultrasound and x-ray.

    An additional 6,000 square feet of space is available for future expansion of services as needs in the community are identified.

    If the new facility to provide continuity of health care in the Fairfield community was a long time coming, some close to the project say it is a modern miracle that it came at all as hundreds of other rural hospitals have closed in recent years, three of those in South Carolina. But for the infusion of millions of dollars from the county in recent years, Fairfield Memorial might have shuttered much earlier.

    Funded by $12M from LifePoint Health for construction of the new facility and $10M ($1M a year for the next 10 years) from Fairfield County, the free standing Providence Health ER was also made possible in part by nearly $4M in transformational funding from South Carolina’s Hospital Transformation Program which supports rural access to healthcare resources.

    Those transformational dollars, appropriated by the legislature, are earmarked to go to large hospitals like Providence to encourage them to partner with rural hospitals that are in danger of closing. Because talks between the hospital and Providence were still in the early stages as the deadline for application for the funds loomed, it was through the significant efforts of Coleman and Douglas that the house and senate extended the application deadline for the Providence project.

    “This Emergency Room is a shining example of what can occur when multiple organizations work together to do what’s right for the community,” Providence-Northeast Hospital CEO Lindy White said in a statement on Tuesday. “The new facility will serve the county’s patients during their times of greatest need and, at the same time, keep them close to home.

    “It is a blessing and an honor,” White said, “to serve such a welcoming part of the country.”

  • FCDC inmate dies after arrest

    WINNSBORO – A Winnsboro man was found unresponsive in his cell at the Fairfield County Detention Center on Saturday, almost 24 hours after being arrested for disorderly conduct.

    Vernon Branham, 38, was taken by ambulance to the emergency room at Fairfield Memorial Hospital where he was pronounced dead at 4:52 p.m. Saturday, according to Fairfield County Deputy Director Davis Anderson.

    Anderson said Branham was arrested around midnight on Friday night at the Bi-Lo shopping center on the Highway 321 Bypass intersection with Columbia Road.

    According to Anderson, Branham was taken to the FMH emergency room for treatment of a laceration over one eye. Anderson said he under stands that Branham was also administered a drug to counteract what medical personnel believed to possibly be a drug overdose.

    Branham was transported to FCDC where he remained until detention center personnel came to transport him to court for a bond hearing around 4:30 p.m. It was then that Branham was found to be unresponsive, Anderson said. He was then rushed by ambulance back to the emergency room.

    The incident is under investigation by the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED).

  • Providence has FMH rehab in strategic plan

    WINNSBORO – As Providence Health prepares to open a new emergency room in Winnsboro, its parent company is being sold.

    Tennessee-based LifePoint Health is being acquired by Apollo Global Management, a large venture capital firm, said Stephen Selzer, interim market chief executive officer of LifePoint.

    Selzer made the announcement during the Fairfield Memorial Hospital’s monthly board of trustees meeting July 24. Apollo disclosed news of the sale in a July 23 news release.

    “They [Apollo] are coming in basically to buy all of the stock of LifePoint and acquiring the company,” Selzer said.

    With the move, LifePoint will essentially switch from a publicly held company to a private corporation.

    According to the Apollo news release, LifePoint is merging with RCCH HealthCare Partners, which is owned by Apollo. Selzer said LifePoint would retain its name.

    As of March 31, Apollo listed nearly $3.2 billion in total investments, according to a quarterly report filed May 8 with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    “We are excited that LifePoint and RCCH are combining to create a national leader in community-based healthcare, and are looking forward to the next chapter of the combined company’s growth,” Matthew Nord, a senior partner at Apollo, said in a news release.

    Closer to home, hospital executives said the merger means only good things for Fairfield County health care.

    “The company will not have to make decisions on a quarter to quarter basis,” Selzer said. “That’s a trap sometimes that you can only make decisions that make you look best in terms of your next quarterly earnings report. It’s a little bit difficult to think bigger long-term.”

    Selzer added that Apollo has tremendous assets which he said would lead to greater investment in health care, though he didn’t say specifically how that would translate in Fairfield County.

    “Once it [the sale] does close, we’ll be able to look at capitalizing on opportunities of having fair market here,” he said. “What I think is going to come out of this is something that’s much better for everybody.”

    The one-level, 18,000-square-foot building, located off U.S. 321 bypass near across from Bi-Lo, will dedicate 12,000 square feet to emergency services and include 6,000 additional square feet of space for future expansion.

    Lindy White, chief executive officer for Providence Northeast in Columbia, said the 6,000-square-foot expansion is part of Providence’s strategic plan for 2019.

    Fairfield Memorial Hospital board members were pleased with the report.

    “It is so apparent that you guys as of late are a hospital on the move and are trying to be on the forefront in the latest and greatest in the health care field,” said trustee Randy Bright.

    “I’m encouraged to know that you are working on a strategic plan,” added trustee James McGraw. “You guys are working to get the word out. The test is going to be inform the people in the rural areas. It’s going to be a great benefit having you in this county.”

    White said the facility’s clinical director position has been posted for a few weeks. She said Providence hopes to fill it in September.

    “We’re charting down that path with hopes of having that person, the right person, who’s going to promote patient quality and experience,” White said. “We will begin interviewing once we find right candidate.

    Other positions should be posted soon, if not already, White said, adding that job fairs will be held in late August.

    Providence also recently toured the Fairfield rehab center, which is the subject of a pending real estate transaction between Fairfield County and Fairfield Memorial Hospital.

    FMH has accepted Fairfield County’s offer of $1.3 million to buy three parcels, with an option to acquire the rehab center for an additional $285,000.

    The county said it wants to see the rehab center remain where it is, but hopes a private buyer will operate it.

    White said she was impressed with the energy at the rehab center, but also said Providence is still evaluating the feasibility of potentially running it.

    “Hopefully with the size of our staff and the staff we have, we can operate the facility too at a little lower cost based on that scale,” White said. “We’re trying to incorporate those things and do that due diligence.

    “The facility shows well and the team is very engaged,” White continued. “I was excited by the engagement. The team takes ownership, which is evident in the patient comments you see.”

  • Council offers FMH $1.6M

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield Memorial Hospital has accepted Fairfield County’s offer of $1.3 million to buy three parcels, with an option to acquire a fourth for an additional $285,000.

    The vote came at the end of a special meeting of the hospital’s board of trustees Tuesday, one day after Fairfield County Council approved presenting the deal to the board.

    Hospital board members were very complimentary of the county’s work in assembling the proposed deal.

    “They really did a good job to pull this off in a timely manner like they did,” said board member James McGraw. “Hats off to Fairfield County.”

    Board member Randy Bright agreed.

    “That’s a continuation of the great job they did working with the state, Providence [Health] and us in pulling Providence into here so that we have a continuation of medical care in the county,” Bright said. “This council has done a great job in moving us forward.”

    The motion the hospital board approved states the hospital “agrees to accept the county’s draft offer, including purchase price, pending legal review by the hospital’s attorneys.”

    Billy Smith, chairman of Fairfield County Council, was pleased to see such a quick turnaround.

    Smith noted the council thought it was important to release details of the deal after first reading, even though deals of this nature are typically kept confidential until third reading.

    “It is a big deal and a big number,” Smith said. “We wanted folks to look at that and give any feedback.”

    Fairfield County is offering $1.3 million to buy three parcels from Fairfield Memorial Hospital, with an option to buy a fourth for $285,000, according to a proposed contract the county released Monday.

    Two parcels consist of medical office buildings. Portables occupy the third parcel, though Smith said the county was interest in that piece of property to improve access to the office buildings.

    The property with the option is the rehabilitation center.

    Smith has said the intent behind purchasing the properties is to preserve the general practitioner offices and rehabilitation center. He still hopes a private provider can step in and operate the rehab center.

    “The purpose was not to be a real estate baron,” Smith said. “It’s to provide services in the county. We’re hoping we can get a user in there, a good provider for the citizens.”

    At Monday night’s council meeting, the council approved a motion authorizing Smith to present terms of the deal to the hospital.

    The council also approved first reading of an ordinance authorizing the purchase of hospital property “for public use or other uses deemed fit by the council and other related matters,” according to the measure approved Monday night.

    Two more readings, as well as acceptance by the hospital, are required to finalize the deal.

    Terms of the deal have been hashed out over the past several months in executive session. Monday night’s presentation of the proposed contract was the first public disclosure of the deal.

    Both votes were unanimous. Council members Mikel Trapp and Douglas Pauley were absent.

    Fairfield County has been discussing for months the possible purchase of property from Fairfield Memorial Hospital, which has been struggling financially. The hospital is in the process of closing.

    In addition to listing a purchase price and option, the proposed deal also contains a stipulation that the county pay $250,000 to Fairfield Memorial Hospital within 10 days of execution of the agreement.

    Funds would be credited toward the purchase price and used by the hospital to cover day-to-day operational expenses, the document states.

    Fairfield County would pay an additional $10,000 upfront, with the money going into an escrow account. The county would pay the remaining balance to the hospital by the closing date, though that date isn’t specified in the proposed document.

    In May, Fairfield County voted to begin negotiations with the hospital to purchase some of its properties. At the time the parcels appraised for about $1.6 million, and $1.9 million with the rehab center included, Smith said.

    County Council approved a memorandum of understanding a month later. In that document, the council voted to purchase some or all of the property. It added a stipulation that a $400,000 lien against the hospital be satisfied before any sale could take place.

  • County inches closer to hospital property purchase

    WINNSBORO—As Fairfield Memorial Hospital prepares to close its doors, Fairfield County is moving forward with plans to acquire some of the hospital property.

    On Monday night, council members voted unanimously to present a memorandum of understanding to Fairfield Memorial to purchase “some or all” of the property.

    No dollar amounts were mentioned, though the motion said a price would be determined at a later date based on the fair market value.

    The property must also be unencumbered by liens or other attachments to the title, according to the motion.

    Council Chairman Billy Smith previously has said the properties of interest to the county were appraised at about $1.9 million including the rehab center, and $1.6 million without the center.

    Smith has also said the hospital has a lien of about $400,000 against it from the S.C. Department of Revenue. The lien would have to be cleared up according to the terms of the county’s memorandum of understanding.

    Applauding the vote was Laura Willingham, director of the hospital’s rehabilitation center.

    “We’re very thankful that the county has stepped in,” she said. “I think that was pretty much going to happen. The county was behind us, and we’re thankful for that.”

    At the May council meeting, Willingham spoke openly about issues concerning hospital finances and the treatment of employees.

    Willingham said she ran into no repercussions for speaking her mind.

    “I feel like the residents of Fairfield County deserve to have rehab here. They need it,” she said. “It needs to stay here in the county.

    Fairfield Memorial’s board of trustees discussed the county’s memorandum in executive session at its meeting Tuesday.

    No decisions were made and while trustees said they couldn’t discuss specifics, they said the discussions with Fairfield County have been highly positive.

    “It was an important board meeting for us,” said Catherine Fantry, chairwoman of the hospital board. “We received information from the board in a positive manner.”

    Earlier in Tuesday’s meeting, there was extensive discussion about hospital finances and plans for disposing of assets. An executive from Providence Health also gave a presentation about the healthcare provider’s plans for Fairfield County.

    Trustee Randy Bright asked several questions concerning Fairfield Memorial’s transition action plan, specifically staffing as well as how the hospital’s assets would be disposed.

    Darlene Hines, the hospital’s chief operating officer, said some employees may leave before the hospital closes later this year. Others may be offered positions with Providence Health, she said.

    “We’re keeping track of every employee that we have here,” Hines said, adding that the hospital was also tracking its leadership structure as well.

    Bright asked about patient rooms. Hines said the hospital still has to keep the facility’s 25 beds to comply with licensing requirements.

    Later in the meeting, Joseph Bernard with Providence Health provided a general timetable for construction of its Fairfield County facility at the bypass across from Bi-Lo.

    Bernard said Providence anticipates advertising for positions in the coming days, possibly into early July.

    Construction, he said, should be completed in November with a grand opening of the emergency room possible by mid-December.

    “Everything remains on track as far as we’re concerned,” Bernard said.


    Related:  Council makes offer to FMH,  Board to list hospital for sale,  Council wraps up budget requests, Providence, County break ground for ER

     

     

  • Council makes offer to FMH

    Liens, Other Conditions Pose Threat to Sale

    WINNSBORO – In a 6-1 vote Tuesday, council members voted to negotiate a purchase agreement with Fairfield Memorial Hospital to acquire select properties, including doctor offices and the rehab center.

    Councilman Mikel Trapp dissented.

    “[The hospital] knows if they don’t have an infusion of cash by ‘X’ date what that means to them,” Council Chairman Billy Smith said after Tuesday’s meeting. “That was one reason for putting this out tonight, to put the ball in their court to show the citizens that the county is willing to work something out.”

    The motion from Councilman Dan Ruff and approved by council Tuesday night authorizes the Fairfield County administrator and attorney to enter into negotiations with the hospital for purchase of some of its property.

    It also requires a conveyance of clean title and other conditions before any deal is reached, and also for a contract to be brought back for council member review.

    The vote came following a lengthy executive session that also included discussion of a legal update on the county’s lawsuit against SCANA, another legal matter concerning a former employee, and an economic development update of potential contracts.

    Council members only voted on the hospital negotiations. There was no discussion from the dais regarding the measure.

    Tuesday’s vote comes two weeks after the rehab center’s director spoke openly about problems employees face at the hospital.

    “We question and don’t quite understand decisions made by administration, such as finances, priorities at this stage of the game and treatment of employees,” Laura Willingham, the hospital’s rehabilitation director, said. “Of course we’ll do what we’re asked to do. But it’s still disconcerting.”

    “We’re interested in the two medical office buildings – the one housing Fairfield Medical Associates and the John Martin Primary Care facility,” Smith said. “The appraisal for those two is right at $1.6 million. If we add the rehab facility, that appraisal jumps up to about $1.9 million.”

    Smith said there is no timeline, nor a specific dollar figure the county has in mind.

    “We discussed a price, but don’t have a solid number yet,” Smith said. “We’re not settling on a dollar figure.”

    Money, however, isn’t the only issue.

    Smith said the hospital is facing several liens, including one he said was in the neighborhood of $400,000 from the S.C. Department of Revenue.

    The Voice couldn’t independently verify late Tuesday the extent of liens the hospital faces because that information wasn’t available on the Fairfield County Clerk of Court/Register of Deeds website.

    Smith said the immediate concern is ensuring the hospital can get its liens removed. He hopes a deal can be made as soon as possible to preserve general practitioner offices and the rehab facility.

  • FMH Board focuses on savings

    WINNSBORO – That Fairfield Memorial Hospital continues to make progress reducing expenses and shrinking operating losses, was the message presented to the Board’s Finance and Audit Committee during its May 22 meeting.

    CFO Tim Mitchell stated that, since fiscal year 2014, FMH has reduced expenses by $8.3 million. However, this includes reducing expenditures by closing hospital departments – Blue Ridge Medical Center, home health and cardiac rehab – and eliminating the delivery of inpatient services which the hospital has not provided in many months. A source who asked not to be named said it was akin to losing 50 pounds by undergoing a double amputation.

    The Voice asked FMH CEO Suzanne Doscher, via email, whether the hospital had done any analysis to show what portion of the $8.3 million in reduced cost was due to increased efficiencies in ongoing operations as opposed to the reduction in services.  At press time, Doscher has not responded.

    Also during the Finance and Audit Committee meeting, Committee Chair Randy Bright drove home the point that FMH administration is successfully finding efficiencies in administrative and overhead costs and to date had validated $232,000 in savings with more to come.

    The hospital is using a computer program that creates spreadsheets to capture suggestions by hospital staff on how to save money and provides a means of documenting these savings.

    During the meeting Bright waved the 36-page document, which was covered in his handwritten notes, and asked staff to continue to follow-up on the savings identified thus far.

    “This goes back to when we approved a tracking mechanism to not only encourage interest in curbing unnecessary expenses but to also track and build on it,” he said.

    He asked that the FMH administration continuously update and add to the document and to make sure “all the boxes are filled in” for expense savings and revenue enhancement suggestions. “It’s like a road map, it really works best if we do all parts of it.

    “There are many good suggestions in here,” Bright said, and “by continuing to review and follow up, it will get us to our goal – it’s kind of a domino effect.”

    In addition, the April financial report presented by Mitchell showed how the elimination of the biggest money-losing services is narrowing the gap between operating costs and income.

    While the hospital continued to report an adjusted operating loss for the month of April of $228,458, this amount was less than the adjusted operating loss posted in March and a decrease of $192,483 in the operating loss reported April a year ago.

    Once bad debt recoveries and the donation of $40,000 from the FMH Foundation were taken into account, the gap between revenues and expenses narrowed to only $12,654 in April.

    Mitchell also reported that, after excluding certain items to maintain comparability of the data, the hospital’s expected deficit for the year is now $566,486, which is $266,828 less than the budgeted deficit.

    However, Mitchell also pointed out that the hospital is continuing to have difficulty paying its creditors, the biggest of which are Cerner, which runs the FMH computer systems for patient records, billing, and finance, and the hospital bed tax which must be paid to the state. This is indicated, he said, by a statistic which shows that almost 75 percent of the hospital’s accounts payable is outstanding after 60 days.

    This number was aggravated by the fact that Cerner and the hospital bed tax are invoiced quarterly, he said, and the bill for these was received this month.

    “What we are doing, and doing very well, is keeping our current vendors reasonably happy,” with the exception of Cerner, he said.

    Doscher also pointed out the $150,000 in restricted cash the Board allowed the hospital to take out to use for payroll and other operating costs has been paid back.

    While the number of patients using the emergency room and associated revenues continued to decline, Mitchell also pointed out that the hospital is doing much better in collecting debts while managing to pay $1 million to vendors in the recent months.  Bright credited this, in part, to “not luck, but due diligence” on the part of hospital administration and staff. He also highlighted that revenues are trending upward, again compared to the grim budget predictions developed last year.

    However, Mitchell also gave the bad news that, in the big picture, the hospital has only 23 cents in current assets to cover every one dollar in current liabilities –“not a good situation.”

    The committee also decided that the hospital’s 2019 budget will take into account “shut down” costs as well as the cost of operating the hospital at least through the end of the calendar year.  The hospital’s current budget runs through September 30, 2018.

    The full Board of Trustees meeting which followed the Finance and Audit Committee meeting lasted barely 30 minutes with no department reports other than the usual financial briefing.  After that, the FMH Board went into executive session to discuss “proposed contractual and personnel matters.”

    When the Board came out of executive session it voted unanimously to give an unpaid, one month leave of absence, beginning sometime in June, to Doscher. There was no other explanation concerning the leave.

  • FMH lawsuit settled

    WINNSBORO—A former Fairfield Memorial Hospital employee’s sexual harassment lawsuit has officially been dismissed, according to recently filed court documents.

    Attorneys for the parties had previously filed a notice and stipulation of dismissal on March 29. However, the federal court database didn’t formally list the case as dismissed until May 18.

    The database also lists the case’s disposition as “settled,” though details of any settlement had not been filed as of press time.

    “All parties who have appeared in this action, by and through their undersigned attorneys, hereby stipulate to the dismissal of this action without prejudice [sic],” the filing states.

    Cases dismissed without prejudice are court actions that allow an identical lawsuit to be filed at a later date, according to the U.S. Judicial Department website.

    The lawsuit against Fairfield Memorial Hospital was originally filed Feb. 22 in Kershaw County Circuit Court. It was removed to federal court a month later.

    Tabitha Williams, a former certified nursing assistant, stated in the litigation that a human resources employee harassed her.

    The lawsuit said the employee made several unwanted sexual comments to her shortly after he started working at the hospital in October 2016.

    In a response filed prior to dismissal, the hospital said the plaintiff was dismissed for poor job performance and attendance issues. The hospital also said the plaintiff refused to cooperate in an investigation into her complaint.

  • FMH Service Awards

    WINNSBORO – On May 8, Fairfield Memorial Hospital recognized eleven employees who have given a collective 150 years of healthcare service to the community.  – Back, from left, Patti Smith – Patient Access, 20 years; Nicole Derrick – Home Health/Rehabilitation, 10 years; Patsy Randolph – Certified Nursing Assistant, 5 years; Kathryn McDaniel – ER Nurse, 10 years; Tiana Mitchell – Chief Nursing Officer, 5 years; Marilyn Wetstone – Respiratory Therapist, 10 years; Linda Tucker – Patient Access, 20 years; Front, from left: Wanda Threat – Respiratory Therapist, 10 years; Janet Hewitt – Patient Access Director, 5 years; Melanie Steed – ER Nurse, 10 years; Janice Todd – Patient Access, 5 years. Also recognized were Mac Russell – Dietician, 10 years; Harold Boyd – Radiology, 10 years; Diane Johnson – Physical Therapy, 5 years; Tara King- ER Nurse, 5 years; and Harold Palmer – Radiology, 5 years.