HomeArchives August 2011

GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP OFFERED

Orange City Home Health & Hospice is offering a Grief Support Group five consecutive Monday evenings from September 12 through October 10 from 6:30 to 8:30pm in the Orange City Area Health System’s main campus training room (lower level near the Puddle Jumper Café) at 1000 Lincoln Circle SE. Bereavement support groups offer a safe place and supportive environment for those who are grieving a recent death, to talk about their feelings of loss. The five-week program provides directed group support within an educational format. There is no cost to attend the Grief Support Group, but donations are accepted and appreciated. Pre-registration is required before September 9. Call Orange City Home Health & Hospice at 712-737-5279.

$1.3 million in Health Care Services and Uncompensated Care Given Annually

Orange City Area Health System provides $1.3 million in community benefits to the region annually, according to a recently completed assessment of those programs and services.  That amount, based on 2010 figures, includes $700,000 in uncompensated care and $600,000 in free or discounted community benefits that Orange City Area Health System specifically implemented to help the region’s residents.

Community benefits are activities designed to improve health status and increase access to health care.  Along with uncompensated care (which includes both charity care and bad debt), community benefits include such services and programs as health screenings, support groups, counseling, immunizations, nutritional services, educational programs, donations, and medical support for community events.

The results for Orange City Area Health System are included in a statewide report by the Iowa Hospital Association (IHA) that shows Iowa hospitals provided community benefits in 2010 valued at more than $1.3 billion.  All 118 of Iowa’s community hospitals participated in the survey.

“We take very seriously our responsibility to be good community members,” reports Marty Guthmiller, CEO of Orange City Area Health System.  “In fact, it is more than a responsibility, it is an obligation as a major employer and as a local resource for health related information.”

The programs and services accounted for in the survey were implemented in direct response to the needs of individual communities, as well as entire counties and regions.  Many of these programs and services simply would not exist without hospital support and leadership, said IHA President Kirk Norris.  But the ability of Iowa hospitals to respond to such needs is continuously challenged by the ongoing economic downturn as well as by huge losses inflicted upon hospitals by Medicare and Medicaid. Total uncompensated care in 2010, including charity care and bad debt, was valued at more than $850 million, an increase of $54 million (6.8 percent) over 2009.

According to Guthmiller, “The health care industry is certainly not immune to economic downturns, but our obligation to care for those in need is paramount and trumps economics. It is a very unique aspect of the ‘business’ of health care. As such, we will continue to offer free and discounted services to those with documented need, remaining good stewards of the resources entrusted to us.”